Selected and reviewed by James Park;
in general order of quality, beginning with the
best.
1. Morton Hunt
The Natural History of Love
(New York: Knopf, 1959—and reprints) 416 pages
A comprehensive book on the
human experience of love,
from the beginning of recorded history.
Very interesting and very readable.
2. Bernard Murstein
Love, Sex, and Marriage Through the Ages
(New York: Springer, 1974) 639 pages
A comprehensive survey of marriage
practices world-wide,
from ancient to modern.
3. Irving Singer
The
Nature of Love:
Vol. 1 Plato to Luther
(Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1966, 1984) 381 pages
The Greek, Roman, and Christian
periods in the history of love:
Plato, Aristotle, Ovid, Lucretius, Medieval thinkers, & Luther.
This is more a history of philosophy as recorded
in books
than how the people of these times actually experienced
love.
4. Irving Singer
The
Nature of Love:
Vol. 2 Courtly and Romantic
(Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1984) 513 pages
How love was experienced from
the Middle Ages to the 1800s.
Courtly love grew out of earlier religious or
mystical traditions,
creating secular strivings to replace religious
worship.
Poets, musicians, playwrights, & later novelists
were the main expressers of love for this period.
5. Irving Singer
The
Nature of Love:
Vol. 3 The Modern World
(Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1987) 473 pages
This volume discusses Freud,
Proust, D.H. Lawrence,
G.B. Shaw, Santayana, Sartre as well as other
modern thinkers.
In these 3 volumes the whole history of love
can be seen thru one mind.
6. Joseph Barry
French
Lovers:
From Heloise
& Abelard to Beauvoir & Sartre
(New York: Arbor House, 1987) 352 pages
The history of several famous
French couples.
Very interesting reading.
7. Robert E. Wagoner
The Meanings of Love:
An Introduction
to the Philosophy of Love
(Westport, CT: Praeger, 1997) 149 pages
A presentation of ideas about
love from Plato and Aristotle
to the present: Socrates, Kierkegaard, Kant,
Sartre, Irigaray.
The book is organized around six forms of love:
erotic (Platonic), Christian, romantic, moral,
mutual, and love as power.
Wagoner has read extensively in the philosophy-of-love
literature;
and he presents the perspectives of several thinkers
quite briefly;
but he has nothing original to add
to the discussion.
If you would like to
see other book reviews
by James Park,
go to the Book
Review Index.
Here you will find about 350 books reviewed
in about 60 bibliographies.
Go to
the beginning of this website
James
Leonard Park—Free
Library