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Affair

An affair is a sexual relationship, romantic friendship, or passionate attachment in which at least one of its participants has a formal or informal commitment to a third person who may neither agree to such relationship nor even be aware of it.

For other uses, see Affair (disambiguation).

Online affair[edit]

The appearance of computer-mediated communication introduces a new type of communication and consequently a new type of "affair". There are various kinds of computer-mediated communication that differ in some significant aspects: one-to-one or group communication formats, interrelating with anonymous or identified people and communicating in synchronous or asynchronous formats.[7] Online affairs combine features of close and remote relationships.


Ben Ze'ef argues that an online affair is a unique kind of affair—termed "detached attachment", or just "detachment"—that includes opposing features whose presence in a face-to-face affair would be paradoxical. Like direct, face-to-face affairs, online affairs can be spontaneous and casual and show intensive personal involvement. However, online affairs can also be more of a planned discourse than spontaneous talk; like written letters, online messages can be stored and thus have a permanent presence, which is absent from face-to-face affairs.[8]


People participating in online affairs may be strangers to each other in the sense that they have never actually met each other. However, they are also close to each other since they share intimate information. In online affairs, people try to enjoy the benefits of both close and remote affairs, while avoiding their flaws. People enjoy the highly valued products of close affairs while paying the low cost of remote affairs. As one woman wrote: 'He constantly told me that he can not provide me with what I would want and I would always respond with: "I'm not asking anything from you, but simply enjoy your company"'.[9]

Affair of the Diamond Necklace

Hamilton–Reynolds affair

Eulenburg affair

Haijby scandal

Iris Robinson scandal

Clinton–Lewinsky scandal

(play)

The Makropulos Affair

(opera)

The Makropulos Affair

Munsinger affair

Profumo affair

Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal

John Edwards extramarital affair

Mark Sanford extramarital affair

Ashley Madison

Courtly love

Crime of passion

Family therapy

On-again, off-again relationship

Polysexuality

Scandal

Love triangle

Adultery

et al. (2004). Patterns and universals of mate poaching across 53 nations: The effects of sex, culture, and personality on romantically attracting another person's partner. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 86, 560–584.

Schmitt, D. P.

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, "Infidelity"