Mona Pereth wrote:
If indeed it is true that many of us long for a romantic relationship but don't care much (if at all) about friendship (as some people are now saying in L&D), why would that be?
I suspect that one reason might be that pop culture endlessly celebrates and glorifies romantic love, but doesn't have much to say about friendship, which is more-or-less taken for granted.
To those readers who are more familiar with pop culture than I am: Is the above observation about pop culture correct?
We've obviously been following very different fictional stories!
As for examples:
7 Seeds (excellent comic and a very bad cartoon)
Sure, has a fair deal of romance, but also lot about deep platonic bonds.
Shingeki no Kyojin (comic and cartoon)
Has barely any romance (and when it does, the other party usually dies), but has some of the deepest platonic bonds I've seen in fiction. Really heart breaking though, so sensitive people might not want to try it.
The Promised Neverland (comic and cartoon)
Though to be fair, this one's a little unclear if all the bonds should be considered friendship or family bonds. Almost no one's related to one another, yet they tend to refer to each other as family.
Suicide Island (comic)
Again, don't read if you're sensitive. As heart warming as it sometimes is, it's often as dark as the title says. This one has some romance too, but puts enough weight on friendships as well if you ask me.
Twelve Monkeys (tv series)
Scifi where friendships, family bonds and one destructive romance travel through time.
When I whistle (book)
Also puts some weigh on romance, family bonds and especially morals, but at the center of it all is the friendship between two men.
Note that while I did list comics, the ones on the list are most certainly not for kids. The first two should be okay for teenagers too, but I wouldn't say so about the last one. Not sure about the third. Despite them mostly being seen as being for kids, there are all kinds of comics.