‘Loving Many’: Polyamorous Love, Gender and Identity

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In times of changing sexualities and identity politics, some people are changing the way they define relationships, from sex-related words, and to feelings-related words. Polyamory, meaning literally ‘loving many, ' is one such case. Polyamory makes sex a peripheral subject in defining a relationship, but the original referential is still there: monogamy as a normative institution, against which polyamory stands. Love, here, takes the grand-stand and becomes the fundamental source of difference from other behaviours portrayed as being more sexualised and less about the feelings and emotions. The ideal of polyamory is also closely related to the idea of confluent love and a pure relationship, both concepts created by Giddens. From the analysis of e-mails exchanged during 2009 in alt.polyamory, the first mailing list ever about polyamory (and one of the birth-places of the word), we attempt to analyse the ways in which polyamorists talk about themselves and how they perceive polyamory by welcoming and interacting with newcomers to the mailing list, and how love is understood and conceptualised in here. In denying a more traditionalist and romantic/binary approach to love, a reconceptualisation of what love is needs to be formulated and argumentatively supported. Also, since polyamory is portrayed as a more feminist-oriented view of love, gender and gender’s relation to feelings and intimate relationships are also put into question and made problematic in these messages. In all of this, the intelligibility of this new identity and its non-normative aspects interact with different narratives of love, emotion and gender in ways to be explored in this chapter.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationGender and Love
Subtitle of host publicationInterdisciplinary Perspectives
EditorsNoemi de Haro Garcia, Maria-Anna Tseliou
Place of PublicationLeiden
PublisherBrill
Pages21-29
Number of pages9
ISBN (Electronic)9781848882089
ISBN (Print)9789004372207
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2019

Keywords

  • Foucault
  • Gender
  • Internet
  • Intimacy
  • Love
  • Mailing list
  • Non-monogamy
  • Polyamory

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