6533b833fe1ef96bd129c000

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Theorising love in sociological thought: Classical contributions to a sociology of love

Mihai Stelian Rusu

subject

Philosophy of loveSociology and Political Science05 social sciencesSocial nature050109 social psychologyFormal relationships0506 political scienceEpistemologyInterpersonal relationshipIntegral theoryPremise050602 political science & public administrationSociology of the familyRelevance (law)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociology

description

This article sets out to explore the contributions of classical social thinkers to a sociological understanding of love. It builds on the premise that despite its major relevance and consequential importance in shaping both individual lives and the social world, until recently love was a heavily undertheorised topic in the sociological tradition. Moreover, the body of disparate sociological reflections that have been made on the social nature of love has been largely forgotten in the discipline’s intellectual legacy. The article then proceeds in unearthing the classics’ contributions to a sociology of love. It starts with Max Weber’s view that love promises to be a means of sensual salvation in an increasingly rationalised social world based on impersonal formal relationships. Next, it critically examines Pitirim A. Sorokin’s integral theory of love. It then moves to address Talcott Parsons’ view on love as a binding force whose social function is to integrate the conjugal couple of the modern nuclear family in the absence of the external pressures exerted by the kinship network. The article concludes by showing how these conceptualisations of love were all embedded in wider theoretical constructions set up to account for the modernisation process.

https://doi.org/10.1177/1468795x17700645