What is romantic friendship? By Sukaina Hirji and Meena Krishnamurthy
Deep and lasting connection comes in many forms: we need a new vocabulary to talk about love. The 20th-century novelist and philosopher Iris Murdoch had a profound love for her closest friend, the philosopher, Philippa Foot. The two women first met when they were students taking classes in philosophy at Somerville College, Oxford. They remained friends for over six decades. From the 1940s to the 1990s, Murdoch wrote over 250 letters to Foot, some of which were recently published.
The relationship
between Murdoch and Foot gave shape and meaning to both of their lives. Murdoch
referred to Foot as “essential you” and said that Foot was “a constant figure”
in her “mental world”. During a period of estrangement, Murdoch wrote: “Losing
you, and losing you in that way, was one of the worst things that ever happened
to me. I hope very much that we can now recapture something.”
After a reconciliation
she wrote, “Pippa, you know without my telling you that my love for you remains
as deep and tender as ever – and always will remain, it is so deep in me and so
much part of me. I cannot imagine that anyone will ever take your place. I
think of you very often. My dear heart, I love you.” After Murdoch’s death,
Foot reported that Murdoch was “the light” of her life.
Some interpreters have
suggested that this was not a mere friendship but a lesbian love affair. In
fact, their relationship did become sexual at one point. But, as Foot explained
to Murdoch’s friend and biographer, Peter Conradi,
they realised that their feelings for each other were not best expressed in
this way. The sexual aspect of their relationship stopped soon after it began.
What, then, were
Murdoch and Foot to each other? Close friends? Lovers? Murdoch herself grappled
with this question. She wrote to Foot, “Sometimes I feel I have to invent a
language to talk to you in, though my heart is very full of definite things to
say. You stir some very deep part of my soul. Be patient with me and don’t be
angry with my peculiarities. I love you very much.” It seems Murdoch herself
didn’t quite know how to characterise her affections for Foot.
What they had may best
be described as a “romantic friendship”. The term has recently gained traction
in popular
discourse and is used to refer to relationships that are intensely
intimate, but that in some way fall short of full-blown romantic relationships.
Although the term is recent, the concept is not new. The Ancient Greek word “philia”
or “friendly love”, did not distinguish between romantic and non-romantic
friendships. And the term “Boston marriage”, coined by Henry James, was used in
the 19th century to describe intimate partnerships between women that were not
always sexual.
The idea of romantic
friendships has gained popularity partly due to an increasing frustration about
conventional notions of romantic love. As the philosopher Carrie Jenkins argues,
our conception of romantic love is largely socially constructed; that is, there
is nothing essential or inevitable about the ways we conceive of romantic relationships.
Instead, the expectations we have around romantic relationships are determined
in large part by our socio-historical context and can often encode oppressive
norms. And according to Jenkins, the mainstream conception of romantic love –
soulmates who fall in love, settle into a monogamous lifelong partnership, and
have children – is too narrow to capture the sorts of romantic relationships
that many of us find most fulfilling.
The proliferation of
new relationship models, including romantic friendships, reflects a growing
desire to be imaginative about what intimate relationships can look like.
Romantic friendships take some of the elements of a traditional romantic
relationship – the desire for intimacy, the commitment to build one’s life
around another person, and even sex – without having to take all of them at
once.
Of course, once we
dispense with the notion that there is one appropriate model for a romantic
relationship, it’s harder to see what distinguishes a romantic relationship
from a close friendship. What does it really mean to ask whether the love
between Murdoch and Foot was romantic or platonic?
Questions about the
status of Murdoch and Foot’s relationship arise partly because of the intensity
of their connection. At times, Murdoch wrote Foot multiple letters over the
course of a few days. She told Foot about her friends, her travels, and her
writing. She shared her ideas for her novels and asked Foot about her life, the
work she was doing, and her family. What is reflected in Murdoch’s letters is a
deep desire to know Foot and to be known by her. We don’t have access to Foot’s
responses, but given her lifelong devotion to Murdoch, we can assume she felt
similarly.
We can think of the
intense connection between them as in line with Murdoch’s own account of love.
In The
Sovereignty of the Good (1970), she theorised that love is vision
perfected. It is seeing the other person with clarity, as she really is, in all
her particularity and detail. In Murdoch’s view, love is a willingness or a
choice to see another person this way. But it is also more than this. Love is a
desire – a desire to really see the other person and to be seen by them in
return.
Even though Murdoch
and Foot were not in a committed romantic partnership, and even though their
relationship was not primarily sexual, they were in love in the sense of having
a deep desire to know and be known. The intense desire to know and be known is
what gives their friendship a romantic feel. If the traditional romantic
relationship model is limiting, the kind of romantic friendship that Murdoch
and Foot had is inspiring.
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Part of what is
appealing about romantic friendships is being able to have the love and
closeness associated with romantic relationships without the corresponding
practical arrangements of sharing one’s day-to-day life with another person –
something typically associated with traditional romantic partnerships. Part of
what is appealing may also be the idea of being able to have a kind of erotic
love – a desire to possess or be proximate to another’s beauty – that doesn’t
require sexual or physical attraction. Even though Murdoch and Foot ultimately
decided not to pursue a sexual relationship, they were able to have a
relationship that was deeply intimate and, in some sense, erotic.
Yet romantic
friendship isn’t without risk. Murdoch was afraid of Foot, claiming that her
fear and love of Foot were “consubstantial”. Why? At times Murdoch found
herself “unable to communicate” with Foot. Their communications were
“problematic and filled with a sense of danger which is sometimes thrilling and
sometimes sad”. Murdoch felt she couldn’t “link expression and emotion, and
that no expression seems quite easy, adequate, right”, noting how odd it was
that they were “awkward… with each other after all these years”.
Here we see the
intense desire to be known and loved in a romantic friendship brings with it
much of the same vulnerability that is found in traditional romantic
relationships. In fact, romantic friendships might involve heightened
vulnerability. Part of what Murdoch describes in relation to Foot is an
inability to really understand what she feels, or what she needs from Foot.
In effect, Murdoch and
Foot didn’t have the language to talk about what they were to each other, or to
describe their relationship to others. They didn’t have a framework to make
sense of the insecurity and vulnerability they felt in relation to each other,
nor explicit norms to help them navigate it. Having a term like “romantic
friendship” may have helped.
Ultimately, deep,
lasting love comes in many forms. And as we continue to generate alternatives
to the traditional relationship model, it is equally important to expand our
language. As the feminist theorist bell hooks argues, “a good definition marks
our starting point and lets us know where we want to end up. As we move toward
our desired destination we chart the journey, creating a map. We need a map to
guide us on our journey to love – starting with the place where we know what we
mean when we speak of love.”
Sukaina Hirji is
assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania and Meena
Krishnamurthy is assistant professor of philosophy at Queen’s University.
https://www.newstatesman.com/ideas/agora/2021/11/what-is-romantic-friendship
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