Routledge History of Love in World Literature and Culture

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affect theory
African literature
American literature
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digital literature
emotions in literature
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European literature
feminist literary criticism
Film studies
folk tales
forthcoming
gender
gender and sexuality studies
global perspectives on romantic relationships
History of emotions
Literature and culture
literature and politics
Literature and religion
Middle Eastern literature
philosophy of literature
postcolonial narratives
queer theory
romantic love
sexuality
South Asian literature
transcultural literature
transnational cultural analysis
World literature

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032950341
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Routledge History of Love in World Literature and Culture offers a wide-ranging, global rethinking of romantic love. Bringing together scholars from across continents and disciplines, the volume shows how love is imagined, practiced, and contested in different cultural, historical, and political contexts, challenging the idea that love follows a single, universal script.

The collection examines representations of eros across Africa, East Asia, the Middle East, South Asia, Europe, and the Americas, spanning medieval texts to contemporary novels, film, television, visual art, and theatre. Well-known case studies include So Long a Letter, The God of Small Things, The Arabian Nights, The Forty Rules of Love, as well as works by Olive Schreiner, Gabriel García Márquez, Louise Erdrich, and modern Chinese and Japanese fiction. Rather than treating love as timeless or purely personal, contributors show how it is shaped by gender, religion, colonial histories, nationalism, technology, ecology, and changing social norms. The volume explores transgressive, queer, feminist, posthuman, and more-than-human forms of love, revealing love as a powerful force that both sustains and unsettles communities.

Designed as an accessible and digestible reference, the essays broaden understanding of the cultural politics of emotions for scholars and students in literary and cultural studies, world literature, gender studies, film studies, posthumanism, and the humanities more broadly. It offers a landmark contribution to the study of emotions and global culture for research and teaching alike.

Megan Moore is Professor of French and affiliate faculty of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Missouri, USA, where her research focuses on identity and community in the medieval Mediterranean. Author of The Erotics of Grief: Emotions and the Construction of Privilege in the Medieval Mediterranean (2021), her current focus is on posthumanism, disability, and emotional communities.

F. Fiona Moolla is Professor of Literature in English and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. She specializes in African and World Literatures with a focus on emotions, especially romantic love.