Intimacies

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19th Century Middle Class
affective bonds research
Alan Frank
Anal Intercourse
Ann Hoffman
Arlene Stein
attachment
authenticity
autonomy
belonging
Biopolitical Governance
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Category=JHBK
Catherine Silver
Chyrs Ingraham
Confer
Contemporary USA
cyber intimacy analysis
Dan Shaw
De Heusch
Dense
desire
Domestic Family Unit
Eileen Brownell
Elizabeth Bernstein
emails as dialogue
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
faith
Familial Unit
feminist family theory
friendship
God
home
home/work
homework
identity
intersubjective
Intimacies: A New World of Relational Life
Intimate Citizen
Intimate Connection
Intimate Solidarity
Isla Vista
Jane Flax
Jane Kupersmidt
Janine de Peyer
Jeffrey Alexander
Jeffrey Prager
Jill Herbert
Joe Rollins
John Borneman
Joseph Schneider
Joshua Gamson
language of excess
Lap
Lap Dance
Leila Rupp
Linda Nicholson
love
Lynn Chancer
marriage
memory
Nancy's Death
Nancy’s Death
narcissistic
Paolo Gardinali
passion
Patricia Clough
personal is political
Personal Relational Life
post-industrial US
psychoanalysis
psychoanalytic perspectives
psychoanalytical therapy
queer
Queer Families
queer kinship studies
Queer Student Activists
recognition
relational sociology
Roger Friedland
self talk
sex
shame
sibling intimacy
social
social power dynamics
Steven Seidman
uncanny
unconventional family
USA
Van Beekum
Verta Taylor
Welfare Reform
William Cornell
work
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415626903
  • Weight: 710g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jul 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the last decade or so, there has been a shift in the popular and academic discussion of our personal lives. Relationships – and not necessarily marriage – have gravitated to the center of our relational lives. Many of us feel entitled to seek intimacy, an emotionally depthful social bonding, rather than simply security or companionship from our relationships. Unlike in a marriage-centred culture, intimacy is today pursued in varied relationships, from familial to friends and to romances. And intimacies are being forged in multiple venues, from face-to-face to virtual, cyber contexts.

A new scholarship has addressed this changing terrain of personal life – there is today a vast literature on cohabitation, parenthood without marriage, sex and love outside marriage, queer families, cyber intimacies and friendships. However, much theorizing and research has focussed either on the interior, subjective or sociocultural aspects of intimacies, not their interaction.

This volume aims to break new ground: Intimacies explores the psychological terrain of intimacy in depthful ways without abandoning its sociohistorical context and the centrality of power dynamics. Drawing on a rich archive that includes the social sciences, feminism, queer studies, and psychoanalysis, the contributors examine:

  • changing cultures of intimacy
  • fluid and solid attachments and intimacies from hook ups, to sibling bonds, to erotic love
  • a politics of intimacy that may involve state enforced hierarchies, class, misrecognition, social exclusion and violence
  • embodied experiences of intimacy and dynamics of endings and loss
  • a pluralization of intimacies that challenge established ethical hierarchies

This volume aims to define the cutting edge of this emerging field of scholarship and politics. It challenges existing paradigms that assume rigid hierarchical approaches to relational life. Intimacies will be of interest for psychoanalysts and for students or scholars in sexualities, gender studies, family studies, feminism studies, queer studies, social class, cultural studies, and philosophy.

Alan Frank is a psychoanalyst practicing in New York City.

Patricia Ticineto Clough is Professor of Sociology and Women’s Studies at Queens College and Graduate Center, CUNY.

Steven Seidman is Professor of Sociology at the University at Albany, SUNY.