In the early twenty-first century shifts in gender and sexuality, work and mobility patterns and especially technology have provoked interest in perceived threats to social bonding on a global scale. This edited collection explores the fracturing of couple culture but also its persistence.
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"This outstanding edited book is powerful and wide-ranging. It enables new ways of understanding how issues of intimacy, romance and social bonding are being mediated and represented; how they are both connected to the broader social and political context, and are changing it.
The introduction is exemplary, offering a wide range of ways of understanding the complexities of contemporary mediated relationships. It brings together a lucid and entertaining array of examples of how, for instance, romance on-screen has changed both before and during the Covid-19 pandemic, amidst a landscape of incels, 'heteropessimism' , ubiquitous smartphones and neoliberal precarity.
The extremely well-written and edited essays are satisfyingly diverse, including work on romance through cellphones in Jamaica, K-drama romances in South Korea, cosmopolitan social politics in Hong Kong film, and racialisation and the romcom. It is a book which will be of use to so many students and academics, and is a highly engaging and extremely pleasurable read."
Jo Littler, Professor and Co-Director of the Gender and Sexualities Research Centre at City, City University London
"The notion of romantic love may be just a few centuries old, but human connections and intimacy in one way or another have always been essential to our existence. This accomplished collection arrives at a historical moment when we have been painfully reminded of all this. With welcome insight and inclusiveness, and with unimagined timeliness, the writers here bring new and illuminating approaches to bear on the many forms our bonding (and our isolation) take in today's increasingly networked world."
Deborah Jermyn, Reader in Film & TV, University of Roehampton, Co-editor of Falling in Love Again (2003) and Love Across the Atlantic (2020)
"A brilliant collection of essays held together by a common thread merging awareness of changing attitudes to gender, social and personal relationships, with analysis of the ever-same, ever-changing creative forms of romantic love and other expressions of intimacy. This is a seminal book for our uncertain times, every chapter addressing with clarity, sharpness and wide-ranging scholarship key questions related to the challenges of life in the shadows of the pandemic."
Peter William Evans, Emeritus Professor of Film, Queen Mary University of London
"What perfect timing for an anthology exploring the new technologies and stories of romance! The writers in this collection offer savvy insights into recent cultural remakes of romantic love, shifts that were evident even before the pandemic unraveled our emotional lives and relationships. Engaging and surprising, these essays address the transnational scope of these transitions and the impact of both social and fictional media in reshaping the practices and meanings of intimacy."
Linda Mizejewski, Distinguished Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Ohio State University
The introduction is exemplary, offering a wide range of ways of understanding the complexities of contemporary mediated relationships. It brings together a lucid and entertaining array of examples of how, for instance, romance on-screen has changed both before and during the Covid-19 pandemic, amidst a landscape of incels, 'heteropessimism' , ubiquitous smartphones and neoliberal precarity.
The extremely well-written and edited essays are satisfyingly diverse, including work on romance through cellphones in Jamaica, K-drama romances in South Korea, cosmopolitan social politics in Hong Kong film, and racialisation and the romcom. It is a book which will be of use to so many students and academics, and is a highly engaging and extremely pleasurable read."
Jo Littler, Professor and Co-Director of the Gender and Sexualities Research Centre at City, City University London
"The notion of romantic love may be just a few centuries old, but human connections and intimacy in one way or another have always been essential to our existence. This accomplished collection arrives at a historical moment when we have been painfully reminded of all this. With welcome insight and inclusiveness, and with unimagined timeliness, the writers here bring new and illuminating approaches to bear on the many forms our bonding (and our isolation) take in today's increasingly networked world."
Deborah Jermyn, Reader in Film & TV, University of Roehampton, Co-editor of Falling in Love Again (2003) and Love Across the Atlantic (2020)
"A brilliant collection of essays held together by a common thread merging awareness of changing attitudes to gender, social and personal relationships, with analysis of the ever-same, ever-changing creative forms of romantic love and other expressions of intimacy. This is a seminal book for our uncertain times, every chapter addressing with clarity, sharpness and wide-ranging scholarship key questions related to the challenges of life in the shadows of the pandemic."
Peter William Evans, Emeritus Professor of Film, Queen Mary University of London
"What perfect timing for an anthology exploring the new technologies and stories of romance! The writers in this collection offer savvy insights into recent cultural remakes of romantic love, shifts that were evident even before the pandemic unraveled our emotional lives and relationships. Engaging and surprising, these essays address the transnational scope of these transitions and the impact of both social and fictional media in reshaping the practices and meanings of intimacy."
Linda Mizejewski, Distinguished Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Ohio State University