Love was classically thought to come in four distinct varieties--agape
(spiritual love), eros (physical passion), philia (friendship) and
storge (familial affection). It might be argued that with modernity, one
of these--eros--has come to dominate our landscape, where romance and
its obstacles inform so many of our cultural narratives and consumer
fantasies. Nonetheless, all of these modalities of love continue to
structure the relationships that govern human societies. Cabinet issue
55, with a special section on "Love," features Christopher Turner on the
"celestial bed" of eighteenth-century proto-sexologist James Graham;
Margaret Gordon on epistolary friendships; and Olga Lemerova on the love
between humans and their pets. Elsewhere in the issue: Sasha Archibald
on the decorative fabric or leather patches worn in the seventeenth
century to conceal facial blemishes; D. Graham Burnett on watermarks;
and Babak Sadr on how zoos perform annual inventories of their animals,
both countable and uncountable.