• For staff
  • For Staff
  • Services A-Z
  • Student Education Service
  • For students
  • Portal
  • Mobile app
  • For Students
  • Faculties
  • Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Cultures
  • Faculty of Biological Sciences
  • Faculty of Business
  • Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences
  • Faculty of Environment
  • Faculty of Medicine and Health
  • Faculty of Social Sciences
  • Lifelong Learning Centre
  • Language Centre
  • Other
  • Staff A-Z
  • Campus map
  • Jobs
  • Alumni
  • Contacts
  • Library
  • IT
  • VideoLeeds
  • Leeds University Union
  • Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Medium
  • Weibo
  • The Conversation
  • RSS news feed
University of Leeds logo
AMITY: The Journal of Friendship Studies
  • Home
  • About the Journal
  • Issues
  • People
  • News and Events
  • Editorial Policy
  • Call for Papers
  • Submissions
  • Home
  • Issues
  • Volume 7:1, 2021

In this section

  • Overview
  • Volume 7:1, 2021
    • Overview
    • The moral value of Aristotelian friendships for utility
    • Practices of friendship and therapeutic writing in the German civic enlightenment
    • There’s no such thing as a free lunch: A dialectical analysis of social cheating during financial transactions among friends
  • Volume 6:1, 2020
    • Overview
    • Editor’s Introduction
    • Friendship and the State: Friendship as an analogy for Political Obligation
    • Unpacking intersectionalities: On boundaries and culture in Javanese friendships
    • Friendship and decolonising cross-cultural peace research in Aotearoa New Zealand
    • Decolonising Friendship
    • Book Review: D. Kaplan ‘The Nation and the Promise of Friendship’
  • Volume 5:1, 2018
    • Overview
    • Workshop Summary: Friendship and Politics: Cross-Cultural Perspectives
    • Sans Amity, No Truth or Justice
    • ‘You’re with your ten closest mates… and everyone’s kind of in the same boat’: Friendship, Masculinities and Men’s Recreational Use of Illicit Drugs
    • Evgeny Roshchin: Friendship Among Nations: A History of a Concept
  • Volume 4:1, 2017
    • Overview
    • ‘Millions of Friends’: Friendship and the Public Sphere in Post-War East Germany
    • Beloved Community: Martin Luther King, Howard Thurman, and Josiah Royce
    • The Form of Politics; Ancient and Medieval Concepts of Friendship; Scorpo Friendship in Medieval Iberia
    • Seow Hon Tan: Justice as Friendship: A Theory of Law
    • Martha C. Nussbaum: Anger and Forgiveness: Resentment, Generosity, and Justice
  • Volume 3:1, 2015
    • Overview
    • Re/production and the work of friendship
    • Fraternity, solidarity and civic friendship
    • Sociability in relations between paid domestic workers and customers
    • The borderology of friendship in academia
    • Barbara Caine: Friendship: A history
    • Samuel Kimbriel: Friendship as sacred knowing: Overcoming isolation
  • Volume 2:1, 2014
    • Overview
    • The many meanings of friendship
    • Human-animal amity and reciprocity
    • Harming the relationship while helping the friend: The outcomes of seeking social support about a romantic partner from women friend groups
    • Faith, friendship, and justice: Elements for a Christian social ethic
    • Friendship in world politics: Assessing the personal relationships between Helmut Kohl and François Mitterrand, and George H. W. Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev
    • Lily Gardner Feldman: Germany’s Foreign Policy of Reconciliation: From Enmity to Amity
  • Volume 1:1, 2013
    • Overview
    • Friendship: An Unanswered Question
    • The Academic Debate on Friendship and Politics
    • Friendship as a Family of Practices
    • Social Freedom and the Value(s) of Friendship
    • Friendship Networks in Medieval Europe: New models of a political relationship
    • Michael H. Mitias, Friendship: A Central Moral Value

Volume 7:1, 2021

Articles

The moral value of Aristotelian friendships for utility, with an online example

Kristján Kristjánsson

 

Practices of friendship and therapeutic writing in the German civic enlightenment

Andreas Rydberg

 

There’s no such thing as a free lunch: A dialectical analysis of social cheating during financial transactions among friends

Michaela R. Winchatz, Donald R. Martin, and Eric Elia

  • © 2023 University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT
  • Terms and conditions
  • Copyright
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • ISSN 2514-9709