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The History of Valentines

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Title: The History of Valentines


1
The History of ValentinesTheories of Love
2
The History of Valentine's Day
  • Who is this mysterious saint and why do we
    celebrate this holiday?
  • February has
    long been a month of romance.
  • St. Valentine's Day contains both
  • Christian and Roman tradition.
  • Catholic Church recognizes
  • three different saints
  • named Valentine
  • or Valentinus,
  • all martyred.

3
  • One legend contends Valentine was priest who
    served during third century Rome.
  • Stories suggest Valentine was killed for
    attempting to help Christians escape harsh Roman
    prisons
  • One legend, Valentine
    actually sent first
    'valentine' greeting himself

4
  • Stories certainly emphasize his appeal
    -sympathetic, heroic, and romantic figure.
  • No surprise that by Middle Ages, Valentine very
    popular saint in England and France.
  • Others claim that Christian church decided to
    celebrate Valentine's feast day in middle of
    February in effort to 'christianize' celebrations
    of pagan Lupercalia festival.

5
  • Lupercalia was fertility festival dedicated to
    Faunus, Roman god of agriculture, in honor of
    She-Wolf who suckled infant orphans, Romulus and
    Remus, founders of Rome)
  • Feb 13-15

6
  • All young
    women in city would place their names in big urn.
  • City's bachelors would choose a name out of urn
    and become paired for a year with his chosen
    woman.
  • These matches often ended in marriage.

7
Written Valentines
  • Verses and greetings have been
    popular since Middle Ages
  • First began to appear after 1400 AD
  • Oldest known valentine was poem written by
    Charles, Duke of Orleans to wife while imprisoned
    in Tower of London following his capture at
    Battle of Agincourt. Now on display in British
    Museum. made in 1400s
  • Paper valentines originated in England and later
    came to America

Roses are red
8
  • Americans began exchanging hand-made valentines
    in early 1700s.

9
  • 1840s, Esther A. Howland sold mass-produced
    valentines in America.
  • Mother of the Valentine, she made elaborate
    creationsgtreal lace, ribbons,colorful pictures
    known as "scrap".
  • Greeting Card Associationgtone billion valentine
    cards sent yearly, making Valentine's Day second
    largest card-sending holiday of year.
  • Approximately 85 percent of all
    valentines purchased by women.

10
  • agape, ajgavph
  • unconditional, impersonal love
  • phileoo, filevw
  • conditional, personal love
  • theloo, qevlw
  • desire or want
  • Eros (èr¹òs, îr¹-) noun
  • Greek Mythology. God of love, son of Aphrodite.
  • 2. Psychiatry. Sexual drive libido.
  • 3. Creative, often sexual yearning, love, or
    desire

11
Theory of Love Types
  • 1. We have all of these 6 love types in our
    relationships
  • 2. What separates us is the degrees of each (each
    person is different)
  • 3. Degrees can change with time
  • In 10 years, 6 is largest / 4 is smallest
  • 4. Every relationship may differ
  • In your first relationship, you are insecure
    passionate
  • (Because s/he was non-committal sexual)
  • In your next, you are calm relaxed
  • (Because s/he was nurturing and warm)
  • Key Others make us who we are in relationships

6
1
5
2
4
3
12
1) Eros Love
  • Highly passionate, sexual,
    intense
  • Often Believe in
  • Love as Magical
  • Love as fate
  • Love at first sight
  • Very American
  • Movies Titanic / Romeo and Juliet / Ghosts /
    Snow White, Sleeping Beauty Cinderella
  • Hollywood loves eros love!

13
2) Ludus Love
  • The Players love
  • Will often
  • Keep their passions in check
  • Avoid trouble and intensity
  • Uncomfortable about commitment
  • Keep secrets
  • Have affairs
  • Remember, we all have a little ludus in us
  • When a relationship gets too intense (or is no
    longer fun), they leave
  • Movie Great Expectations / St. Elmos Fire /
    Cruel Intentions / Dangerous Liaisons
  • Hollywoods Formula Ludus plays with Eros--Eros
    is crushed

14
3) Storge Love
  • Peaceful and slow
  • Not passionate and intense
  • Friendship is key
  • Difficult to separate from friendships
  • This love . . .
  • Develops over time
  • Endures long periods of inactivity
    or excitement
  • Lacks heat of eros and games of ludus
  • Movies Harry Met Sally / The Wedding Singer /
    My Best Friends Wedding /
    Shrek / Youve Got Mail / Beauty
    and the Beast /How To Lose A Guy

15
4) Pragma Love
  • Practical
  • Looking for types
  • Parents, , race, nationality, family
  • Love is logical More stable
  • Not magical, but rational
  • Movies Pretty Woman / Bridges of MC / As Good As
    It Gets / Shakespeare in Love / Big Fat Greek
    Wedding / Grease / Maid in Manhattan
  • Hollywood Formula Woman settles for pragma love-
    -but is unhappy

16
  • Extreme highs and lows
  • Jealousy
  • Obsessive
  • Self-worth from relationship
  • Nothing else matters
  • Movies Fatal Attraction / Something About Mary /
    American Beauty / The Crush / Memento / Taxi
    Driver / Swim Fan
  • Hollywood Formula slashing tires, stalking,
    going into exile, drinking

5) Mania Love
17
6) Agape Love
  • This love is . . .
  • Compassionate
  • Selfless
  • Egoless
  • No concern for personal reward/gain
  • Want best for the other person
  • Movies Forrest Gump / Man Loves a Women / John Q
    / Casablanca /

18
Which Type are You????
  • 1) My love and I have the perfect physical
    chemistry between us
  • 2) I feel that my love and I were truly meant
    for each other (fate)
  • 3) My love and I really understand each
    other (soul mates)
  • 4) My love fits my ideal standards of physical
    beauty (my idea of a 10)
  • 5) I try to keep my love a little uncertain about
    my commitment to him/her
  • 6) I believe that what my love doesnt know about
    me wont hurt him/her (I keep secrets)

19
  • 7) It is important that our relationship is fun
    and exciting
  • 8) When my love gets too dependent on me, I want
    them to back off
  • 9) To be genuine, love must develop over time
    (not an over-night thing)
  • 10) I expect to always be friends with my love
  • 11) Our love is really a deep friendship, not a
    mysterious, mystical emotion
  • 12) Our love is the most satisfying because it
    developed from, and is based on, a deep caring
    relationship

20
  • 13) In choosing my love, I believed it was best
    to love someone with a similar background
  • 14) A main consideration in choosing my love was
    whether my family would approve
  • 15) An important factor in choosing a partner is
    whether or not he/she would be a good parent
  • 16) One consideration in choosing my love was
    what career he/she selected
  • 17) When things arent right with my love and me,
    my stomach gets upset
  • 18) Sometimes I get so excited about being in
    love with my love that I cant sleep

21
  • 19) When my love doesnt pay attention to me, I
    feel sick all over (emotionally, physically,
    etc.)
  • 20) I cannot relax if I suspect that my love is
    with someone else
  • 21) I try to always help my love through
    difficult times
  • 22) I would rather suffer myself than let my love
    suffer
  • 23) When my love gets angry with me, I still love
    him/her fully and unconditionally
  • 24) I would endure all things for the
    sake of my love

22
Calculating the Results
  • Statements
  • 1-4 are Eros
  • 5-8 are Ludus
  • 9-12 are Storge
  • 13-16 are Pragma
  • 17-20 are Manic
  • 21-24 are Agape
  • Highlight your high and low brackets
  • 3 to 4 Trues or Falses are Markers

Not All Love Is Healthy Love
23
General Findings
  • I. National Findings on Love Test
  • A. Men Eros and Luduc
  • B. Women Manic, Pragma, and Stroge
  • C. Age and Evolution
  • Eros and Mania are young loves
  • In time, couples grow into Stroge and Agape love

24
General Research
  • III. Romantic Love (believe it or not)
  • A. Married men have more romantic concept of love
    than their wives
  • Men believe in love at first sight more
  • More men believe love can overcome anything
  • B. Twice as many women would marry for reasons
    other than love
  • In 1965, 75 of women said they would marry a man
    they did not love if he fit the bill in other
    ways
  • Today, only about 10 of American women say they
    would (Whitehead, 2003)
  • 49 in Indians
  • 51 in Pakistan

25
  • C. After divorce, Men more likely to remarry
  • And sooner
  • D. Married men are psychologically and physically
    healthier, but not so for women
  • Reason 1 Without their wives, most men have no
    support system and no one to talk to about lifes
    stresses
  • Men are 8 times more likely to commit suicide
    after divorce
  • Reason 2 Women do most of work in most
    relationships (even when both are working outside
    home)

26
General Findings
  • IV. Age, Love, and Sex (1999 AARP Survey)
  • 60 of couples 45-60 years old report having sex
    once a week (the average for all couples)
  • 20 over 75 report having sex once a week
  • After 50 years of age, men become more romantic
    women become more sexually assertive
  • Majority of couples over 55 report finding their
    significant other more romantic and attractive

Your Grandparents
27
Love Triangles - Robert Sternberg
  • Passion sexual desire and physical attraction
    part of romantic love
  • Intimacy connection and feelings of closeness
    emotional investment
  • Commitment to love in short term
    maintain that love in long term
  • 8 types of love can be defined by model
  • Nonlove, Liking, Infatuation
  • Empty, Romantic, Companionate Love
  • Fatuous Love, and Consummate Love

28
R.Sternberg Model of Love
Intimacy
Commitment
Passion
29
  • Companionate love passion has died down between
    2 people commitment and intimacy with no passion
  • Fatuous love associated with whirlwind romances
    and quicky marriages passion and commitment with
    no intimacy
  • Consummate love complete measure of love
    involving combination in equally extreme amounts
    of passion, commitment and intimacy
  • goal to shoot for in lasting relationship ideal
    marriage 80 year olds that are still madly in
    love with each other
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