The ‘hard work’ of polyamory ethnographic accounts of intimacy and difference in the Netherlands

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2022
Journal Journal of Gender Studies
Volume | Issue number 31 | 7
Pages (from-to) 874-887
Number of pages 14
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract

The subversive potential of nonmonogamous relationships to provide nonpossessive and meaningful modes of bonding beyond heteropatriarchal monogamous relationships has been a concern of feminist scholarship and activism for more than a century. Focusing on polyamory in the Netherlands, this paper aims to contribute to this scholarship by putting power relations at the centre of analysis. Ethnographic participant observation and in-depth interviews with people in polyamorous relationships show that their experiences of polyamory as emotionally, ethically, and subjectively hard work are deeply entangled with gender, age, class, and racial difference, which is understood as both fluid and as emerging in social contexts. This entanglement of hard work and difference is identified and investigated in three areas: resisting stigmatization, negotiating autonomy and commitment, and managing jealousy. It is argued that although polyamory’s appeal to ethical plurality offers possibilities for resisting heteropatriarchal forces in society, its simultaneous reliance on an individualistic therapeutic discourse undermines those very possibilities for resistance, serving an apolitical late-capitalist demand for self-management and -improvement.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2022.2098094
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