Fictive-friendship and the Fourth Gospel

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Authors

Crook, Zeba A.

Journal Title

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Publisher

OpenJournals Publishing

Abstract

The phenomena of friendship and giftship in antiquity have been the focus of much anthropological interest, yet those terms are still used much too broadly, wherein any one can be friends and anything exchanged is a gift. This article argued that proper friendship requires equality of exchange and status. When inequality of exchange is present, we will almost always also have inequality of status. These two things together naturally and necessarily result in the absence of frank speech. At this point, proper friendship (defined by frank speech) and the exchange of gifts (defined by equality of value) are impossible, and we have fictive-friendship, a term I have introduced in this article. Fictive-friendship refers to the practice, often but not exclusively amongst elites, of using friendship language to mask relationships of dependence (patronage and clientage). I closed my argument by looking at two examples of fictive-friendship in the Gospel of John.

Description

This article was initially presented as a paper at the International Meeting of the Context Group that was held on 02−05 August 2010 at the University of Pretoria, South Africa.

Keywords

Fictive-friendship, Gospel of John

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Crook, Z.A., 2011, 'Fictive-friendship and the Fourth Gospel', HTS Teologiese Studies/HTS Theological Studies, 67(3), Art. #997, 7 pages. http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/hts.v67i3.997