A feminist manifesto on how we understand romantic love today
A bold manifesto by a brilliant young mind on our contemporary understanding of romantic love and how the contradictions of inherited traditions and technology affect the way we build relationships.
In the twenty-first century, our romantic ambitions are intrepid... We want egalitarian and honest bonds, and we are eager to understand what that means. We also want to fall in love, to have sex, and to be loved; we want stability and adrenaline-the lifeboat and the open sea-, we want everything at the same time. But is it possible to have all of that? Or is this a recipe for frustration? Is this an honest yearning or a mere aspiration, a desire for completeness? Am I an idiot if I pursue it? Am I a cynic if I give up on it?
Born and raised in an Orthodox Jewish community in the heart of Buenos Aires, Tamara Tenenbaum learned about the sexual and emotional habits of the secular world like an anthropologist discovering an unknown civilisation.
Drawing from philosophy, feminist activism, conversations with friends, and from an attempt to turn her own experience into a laboratory for personal and collective reflection, Tenenbaum dives into the universe of affection, celebrates the end of romantic love as we know it, and proposes the eroticization of consent.
The End of Love is a tool for the creative destruction of romantic love and the principles that sustain it so that, from its ashes, a better love?one that makes men and women freer in their relationships?can rise.