In The Name of Love: Romantic ideology and its victims
Aaron Ben-Ze'ev and Ruhama Goussinsky
Abstract
Everyone longs for the ideal love, but as the song goes, love hurts. This book is
about the romantic ideology of love and the ironic dangers that goes with it. The
chapters argue that romantic ideology implies extreme behavior. Love is generally
considered a moral, altruistic, and well-intentioned emotion; however, this
idealized notion of love is far from realistic. People have committed the most
horrific crimes in the name of the altruistic ideals of religion and love. Even if
popular media depicts that love is all we need, recent statistics in the United
States show a remarkable number of t ... More
Everyone longs for the ideal love, but as the song goes, love hurts. This book is
about the romantic ideology of love and the ironic dangers that goes with it. The
chapters argue that romantic ideology implies extreme behavior. Love is generally
considered a moral, altruistic, and well-intentioned emotion; however, this
idealized notion of love is far from realistic. People have committed the most
horrific crimes in the name of the altruistic ideals of religion and love. Even if
popular media depicts that love is all we need, recent statistics in the United
States show a remarkable number of the victims of love. There is a reported increase
in the number of sufferers depression and suicide after a bad breakup or divorce.
This book includes a major case study concerning men who have murdered their wives
or partners allegedly ‘out of love’. It is estimated that over
30% of all female murder victims in the US die at the hands of a former or present
spouse or boyfriend. Killing the one you love is not an example of
‘loving too much’ but of how love can go wrong when
totalitarianism and extremism, rather than compromise and accommodation, are the
guiding principles. The murderous dictator who proclaims that he ‘loves
his people too much’ fits neatly into this category.
Keywords:
love,
romantic ideology,
moral,
altruist,
crime,
depression,
suicide,
divorce,
totalitarianism,
extremism
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2008 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780198566496 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: March 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198566496.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Aaron Ben-Ze'ev, Author
President, and Professor of Philosophy, University of Haifa,
Israel
Ruhama Goussinsky, Author
Lecturer, Human Service Department, Emek Yezreel College,
Afula, Israel
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