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April 25, 2001
Contact: Jennifer McNulty (831) 459-2495; jmcnulty@cats.ucsc.edu
LESSONS OF LOVE: NEW BOOK SHOWS WHY MOVIES LIKE TITANIC RESONATE--AND SHEDS LIGHT
ON THE PATH TO REAL-LIFE HAPPY ENDINGS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SANTA CRUZ, CA--The enormous popularity of films like Titanic, The Bridges of
Madison County, and Pretty Woman reveals the universal appeal of a good
love story. As in real life, though, the stories told in these three blockbusters
don't always end happily.
Sociologist Marcia Millman, a professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz,
believes that is part of their appeal. In her new book The Seven Stories of Love:
And How to Choose Your Happy Ending (New York, NY: William Morrow, 2001), Millman
asserts that these films resonate with audiences in part because they reflect plot
lines that turn up over and over again in real life: stories of first love, sacrifice,
rescue, postponement, and more. "Many people think Hollywood movies give audiences
unrealistic views of love, but I think people love movies because they reflect our
own experiences and can help us understand our choices," said Millman.
In The Seven Stories of Love, Millman explores the major romantic scenarios
that play out in films, novels, and real life. She identifies seven distinct plots
and explains the unconscious elements and origins of each. Based on more than two
decades of scholarship on the sociology of love, the book presents plots drawn from
art as well as real-life interviews to show how people tend to make choices about
their romantic partners without being aware of the factors shaping their actions.
The Seven Stories of Love is a highly readable book that bridges the fields
of psychology and sociology.
"I wanted to write a book that would illuminate romantic love and help readers
have more gratifying relationships," said Millman, whose previous books are
about medical errors, money and love, and women's obsession with weight. "Although
I write about seven love plots, readers invariably find that one story resonates
more strongly for them." That process of identifying one's own personal story
can help readers gain insight into their own patterns of behavior and can help them
build their own "happy endings," she added.
"Unfortunately, many of us keep ending up in the same place over and over because
we don't understand our original scenario," said Millman.
Romantic scenarios in real life and in fiction, from Pride and Prejudice to
Dirty Dancing, are driven by the wish to turn early losses or traumas into victories,
said Millman. "Without realizing it, we repeat and relive disguised versions
of our childhood scenarios in order to give them a happier ending." While some
people grow and resolve their problems through love, others become anxious and depressed
and have difficulty achieving satisfying romantic connections because they keep repeating
the same defeat instead of overcoming it. By understanding their basic story and
learning to exercise control over it instead of helplessly following its course,
readers can finally choose the right partner or make an existing love relationship
more rewarding.
Millman's seven stories of love are:
1. First Love: This story is about a lover who helps us separate from our
parents and establish our own independent identities. This is why adolescent girls
flocked to Titanic and Dirty Dancing. Pining for a first love years
later is a signal that something is missing in life, and it often accompanies a desire
to recapture our youth.
2. Pygmalion: The Mentor and the Protégée: My Fair Lady,
the most famous modern Pygmalion story, focuses on the controlling male teacher,
but the protégée also has an agenda: A desire to be recognized and
nurtured by a parental figure even as she wants to gain his knowledge and power for
herself. Can relationships that start out distinctly unequal have a happy ending?
It can be difficult if the "teacher's" need for admiration and control
conflicts with the "student's" need to grow.
3. Obsessive Love: Millman examines real-life scenarios and several examples
from popular culture, including Fatal Attraction, and concludes that an obsessive
relationship is doomed unless the one who loves more can shift some emotional energy
to other interests and people.
4. The Downstairs Woman and the Upstairs Man: This rags-to-riches plot, familiar
to fans of Pretty Woman, Jane Eyre, and Pride and Prejudice, features
a smart but poor and unconnected woman who reaches beyond her social status to a
powerful and influential man. Initially cool to a woman so beneath him, the man ends
up defying convention and committing to her. Women drawn to this scenario had fathers
who criticized or abused them, making them feel worthless and unprotected. They repeat
this story not to suffer but to triumph--to be desired instead of ignored, and to
prove that they are the equal of any man.
5. Sacrifice: Guilt Overwhelms Desire: People who live out this plot don't
believe they can have what they want without harming another or paying a terrible
price. This scenario raises self-esteem through renunciation rather than happiness.
Classic examples are Casablanca, The End of the Affair, and The Bridges
of Madison County.
6. Rescue: Doing What Your Mother Could Not: The woman who is drawn to rescue
scenarios often had a father who was sick, weak, or absent. Although the woman believes
her love can help her wounded lover reach his full potential, the key element of
this story is the woman's ultimate wish to restore a strong lover/father so he will
rescue her back. The story of Beauty and the Beast contains many subtle aspects
of the rescue plot.
7. The Courage to Love: Overcoming Postponement and Avoidance: Probably the
universal favorite, this love story is about the willingness to take a risk for love--and
having the faith things will work out, as fans of Sleepless in Seattle will
recall. People who live out this scenario fall in love only after they are forced
to confront the reality of time and mortality. The courage to love actually provides
a sense of immortality, while people who avoid or postpone love usually discover
that their lives have gone by unlived.
Note to journalists: Marcia Millman can be reached directly at (831) 459-4431
or via e-mail at millman@cats.ucsc.edu.
Review copies of The Seven Stories of Love: And How to Choose Your Happy Ending
are available for reporters. Please contact Jennifer McNulty in the UCSC Public Information
Office at (831) 459-4399 or jmcnulty@cats.ucsc.edu.
Marcia Millman is also the author of The Unkindest Cut: Life in the Backrooms
of Medicine; Such a Pretty Face: Being Fat in America, and Warm Hearts
and Cold Cash: The Intimate Dynamics of Family and Money.
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