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Love-hate relationship - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Love-hate relationship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A love-hate relationship is a personal relationship involving simultaneous or alternating emotions of love and enmity. Sometimes the person may love the other person/object, but hate oneself for it. This relationship can, but does not have to, be of a romantic nature. It may occur when people have completely lost the intimacy within a loving relationship, yet still retain some passion for, or perhaps some commitment to, each other.

It is used most frequently in psychology, popular writing and journalism, much more so than in everyday discourse, and almost never amongst the individuals of whom it is predicated. It can be extended to relationships with inanimate objects, or even concepts.[1] In popular journalism, it is often employed speculatively by writers to explain the relationship between celebrity couples who have been divorced, then who reunite (notably Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton).

A related theme is "obligatory friendship", where usually one party feels indebted to another and forges a friendship but still holds a grudge over a particular past disappointment or set of disappointments, while the "creditor" in the relationship agrees to the nature of the relationship often for security reasons, but remains aware of the "debtor's" grudge and feels counter-indebted until the cause of the grudge is sufficiently overcome.

It can be argued that, due to the fact that the subjects love each other despite issues they have, a love hate relationship actually represents a stronger bond than a simple love relationship does. Also since a constant hatred is felt, any new issues which emerge are unlikely to put the relationship in jeopardy.

[edit] In Fiction

A love-hate relationship is a familiar feature in all kinds of fiction, from soap opera to literature, although (especially in older examples) it is not always named as such. In drama, it is often deployed to create tension between characters, and it is frequently employed as a plot device in romantic comedy. A narrative archetype is sometimes that the protagonists end up living happily ever after. Some examples of love-hate relationships in fiction include:

6teen

The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius

Atomic Betty

Avatar: The Last Airbender

Babylon 5

Ben 10

  • Ben and Gwen Tennyson

Cheers

  • Sam Malone and Diane Chambers (and then Rebecca Howe)

Codename: Kids Next Door

  • Numbuh 3 and Numbuh 4
    • Numbuh 3 shows her love more.

Dexter's Laboratory

  • Dexter and Dee Dee

EastEnders

Entourage

  • Ari and Lloyd

Friends

Harry Potter

The Life and Times of Juniper Lee

Living Single

  • Kyle Barker and Maxine Shaw

Married... with Children

A Midsummer Night's Dream

Moonlighting

  • David Addison and Maddie Hayes

Much Ado About Nothing

  • Benedick and Beatrice

Neon Genesis Evangelion

The Nanny

The Odd Couple

  • Oscar Madison and Felix Unger

Reba

  • Reba and Brock (divorced) Hart

Sonic the Hedgehog series

This Is Us

  • George Michelotti and Andrea Hagan

Till Death Us Do Part and In Sickness and in Health

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (portrayed by Burton and Taylor on film)

  • George and Martha

Will & Grace

Wuthering Heights

Xena: Warrior Princess

A common feature in (comic) fiction is that the protagonists in a love-hate relationship might term it a hate-hate relationship in moments of especial antagonism. Love-hate relationships are often common in manga, especially in the Shōjo genre.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Russia and Britain | A love-hate relationship | Economist.com
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