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Availability
In stock
ISBN
9781622730148
Edition
1
Publication Date
June 10, 2014
Physical Size
236mm x 160mm
Number of Pages
134
"For far too long, love has been considered a private concept, closed in the sphere of intimacy, friendship or religiosity. Yet love has also a social and public value. This is what Gennaro Iorio states in his new book Sociology of Love thus introducing love not only as a new critical concept for the social sciences, but also as a new principle for social and political emancipation of humanity.
The aim of the sociologist, professor at the University of Salerno, is ambitious and innovative: bucking the pessimistic trend of contemporary sociology, he discovers that the reality we live in is impregnated with love. The challenge is to recognize it and to call things by their proper name; gratuity, overabounding and creativity are aspects that we experience in everyday life, but they are also expressions of small-great heroisms, which offer an alternative to instrumentalism, uncertainty and consumerism, typical of contemporary social life.
The book by Iorio deserves to be read, because it flies in the face of the weak thought emerging in social sciences, and proposes a new direction for the contemporary debate: on the shoulders of giants such as Sorokin, Simmel, Giddens, Boltanski and Honneth, it is time to go back and rediscover the ordinariness of the relationships which makes love something extraordinary for the whole society."
Silvia Cataldi
University of Cagliari
Department of Social Sciences and Institutions
"What is agape? And, most importantly, when does agape become a society? These are the key questions addressed in the book Sociology of Love by Gennaro Iorio (Vernon Press, 2014).
Not all forms of love are equal. Neither do all of them equally contribute to explain the actions, interactions and relationships that weave the plot of the social fabric. Among these forms agape is decisive, even if sociology is late to recognize this fact. The originality of this book is that it reads agape within the sociological framework as a social phenomenon even before it becomes a theological or a metaphysical one. The author recovers and innovates studies of love by the classics of sociology, as Weber, Sorokin and Simmel. The research distinguishes agape from similar phenomena as eros, philia, gift and grace and discovers authors and researches about agape, especially in reference to identity processes, as postfreudian studies of Winnicott, social theory of Honneth, the philosophy of Marion. Boltanski becomes main author in the direction of critical sociology as a leading approach to this work. Not a Christian sociology, therefore, but a critical sociology. A sociology that, as empirical social science, rather than starting from universal and abstract axioms, or providing regulatory requirements, is based on empirical and observable data with which it grasps the social reality. This objective is also guaranteed through the study of the three empirical cases that make this study a full and original work with regards to the degree of conceptual and sociological innovation on the subject. The work has a clear ability to address a heterogeneous audience without any interpretative confusion between the various points of views: Among those who like the theme are theologians, Christians and, especially, social scientists."
R. Iannone
Department of Political Science, Sapienza - University of Rome