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Distant Love

ISBN: 978-0-745-66181-0

January 2014

Polity

220 pages

Description
Love and family life in the global age: grandparents in Salonika and their grandson in London speak together every evening via Skype. A U.S. citizen and her Swiss husband fret over large telephone bills and high travel costs. A European couple can finally have a baby with the help of an Indian surrogate mother.

In their new book, Ulrich Beck and Elisabeth Beck-Gernsheim investigate all types of long-distance relationships, marriages and families that stretch across countries, continents and cultures. These long-distance relationships comprise so many different forms of what they call ‘world families’, by which they mean love and intimate relationships between individuals living in, or coming from, different countries or continents. In all their various forms these world families share one feature in common: they are the focal point in which different aspects of the globalized world become embodied in the personal lives of individuals. Whether they like it or not, lovers and relatives in these families find themselves confronting the world in the inner space of their own lives. The conflicts between the developed and developing worlds come to the surface in world families- they acquire faces and names, creating confusion, surprise, anger, joy, pleasure and pain at the heart of everyday life.

This path-breaking book will appeal to a wide readership interested in the changing character of love in our times.
About the Author
Ulrich Beck is one of the world's leading sociologists and social thinkers, well-known for his bestselling book Risk Society. He is Emeritus Professor at the University of Munich and Professor of Sociology at the LSE.

Elisabeth Beck-Gernsheim is Visiting Professor at the University of Trondheim. Her previous books include The Normal Chaos of Love (co-authored with Ulrich Beck).

Features
  • A major new work by two leading social thinkers exploring the impact of globalization on the nature of love and family life.
  • Explores the ways in which modern relationships have become stretched across spatial distances- e.g. marriages that cross continents and cultures, relationships that depend on Skype, migrant workers who leave their children behind, etc.
  • Provides a highly original analysis of the current state of what they call ‘world families’, by which they mean relationships of love and family life between people living in, or coming from, different countries or continents.
  • Argues that world families are the focal point where different aspects of our global world become embodied in the personal lives of individuals.
  • This engaging account of love at a distance will be of particular interest to students and scholars in sociology, social theory and gender studies; it will also appeal to a wide readership interested in the changing nature of love and family life in the contemporary world.