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El. knyga: Love Letters: Saving Romance in the Digital Age

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In today’s world of Tinder and texting, do we write and save love letters anymore? Are we more likely to save a screen shot of a text exchange or a box of paper letters from a lover? How might these different ways to store a love letter make us feel? Sociologist Michelle Janning’s Love Letters: Saving Romance in the Digital Age offers a new twist on the study of love letters: what people do with them and whether digital or paper format matters. Through stories, a rich review of past research, and her own survey findings, Janning uncovers whether and how people from different groups (including gender and age) approach their love letter "curatorial practices" in an era when digitization of communication is nearly ubiquitous. She investigates the importance of space and time, showing how our connection to the material world and our attraction to nostalgia matter in actions as seemingly small and private as saving, storing, stumbling upon, or even burning a love letter. Janning provides a framework for understanding why someone may prefer digital or paper love letters, and what that preference says about a person’s access and attachment to powerful cultural values such as individualization, taking time in a hectic world, longevity, privacy, and keeping cherished things in a safe place. Ultimately, Janning contends, the cultural values that tell us how romantic love should be defined are more powerful than the format our love letters take. Her work fits within larger academic questions about the sociology of emotions, how culture works, the importance of objects in social relations, and the significance of privilege in everyday life.

List of Figures
xi
Series Foreword xii
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
1 The Stuff of Love: The Historical and Cultural Significance of (Saving) Love Letters
1(15)
What Is a Love Letter'?
4(3)
What Is Cultural About Romantic Love?
7(4)
Connecting Love and Letters
11(2)
Love Letter Curatorial Practices
13(3)
2 The Digitization of Love: Technology and Communication Within Romantic Relationships
16(20)
Romantic Relationships in a Digital World
17(2)
Digital and Paper Love Letters as Cultural Objects
19(5)
Curatorial Practices Surrounding Digital and Paper Love Letters
24(2)
Literacy, Letters, and the Digital Divide
26(10)
3 Space Matters: Where and How Love Letters Are "Curated"
36(14)
Storage, Tidying Up, and Too Much Stuff
38(1)
Where Are the Love Letters, and Why Does Location Matter'?
39(4)
Gender, Heteronormativity, and Love Letter Storage
43(7)
4 Time Matters: Nostalgia, Preserving Love Letters, and the Social Construction of Time and Memory
50(14)
Age and the Digitization of Love Letters
51(5)
Saving Love Letters and the Allure of Nostalgia
56(3)
Playing With Time: Imagined Future Kinship Nostalgia
59(5)
5 Love Letters as Both Individual and Collective: The Public Significance of Private Communications
64(29)
Choice, Constraint, and Culture: Love Letters as (a) Social Matter
66(4)
Love and Fear in the Digital World: The Cultural Work of Emotions
70(2)
A New Conceptual Framework
72(12)
Privilege and the Fear of Love Letter Loss
84(9)
Methodological Appendix 93(5)
Bibliography 98(4)
Index 102
Michelle Janning received her Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Notre Dame. She is Professor of Sociology at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. She has published numerous book chapters and articles on family relations and material culture, authored the book The Stuff of Family Life: How Our Homes Reflect Our Lives (2017), and edited the collection Contemporary Parenting and Parenthood: From News Headlines to New Research (2018). She has received a Fulbright Specialist Grant and teaching awards, and her work has appeared in national and international television, radio, Internet, and print outlets, including U.S. News and World Report, Real Simple, The Verge, Author Story, and Positive Parenting Radio. Go to www.michellejanning.com to learn more.