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Marriage In A Culture Of Divorce (Women In The Political Economy) [Paperback]

Karla Hackstaff (Author)

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Book Description

January 15, 2000 1566397251 978-1566397254
Today, when fifty percent of couples who marry eventually get divorced, it's clear that we have moved from a culture in which 'marriage is forever' to one in which 'marriage is contingent'. In this book sociologist Karla Hackstaff investigates intact marriages to examine the impact of new expectations in a culture of divorce. "Marriage in a Culture of Divorce" examines the shifting meanings of divorce and gender for two generations of middle-class, married couples. Hackstaff finds that new social and economic conditions both support and undermine the efforts of spouses to redefine the meaning of marriage in a culture of divorce. The definitions of marriage, divorce, and gender have changed for all, but more so for the young than the old, and more for women than for men. While a portion of spouses in both generations believe that marriage is for life and that men should dominate in marriage, the younger generation of spouses increasingly construct marriage as a contingent rather than forever. Hackstaff presents this evidence in archival case studies of couples married in the 1950s, which she then contrasts with her own case studies of people married during the 1970s, and she discovers there is evidence of a significant shift in who does the emotional work of maintaining the relationship. It is primarily the woman in the '50s couples who 'monitors' the marriage, while in the '70s couples, both husband and wife engage in a 'marital work ethic', including couples therapy in some cases. The words and actions of the couples Hackstaff follows in depth the '50's Stones, Dominicks, Hamptons, and McIntyres, and the '70's Turners, Clement-Leonettis, Greens, Kason-Morrises, and Nakatos reveal the changes and contradictory tendencies of married life in the U.S. There are traditional relationships characterized by male dominance, there are couples striving for gender equality, there are partners pulling together, and partners pulling apart. Those debating 'family values' should not forget, Hackstaff contends, that there are costs associated with marriage culture as well as divorce culture, and they should view divorce as a transitional means for defining marriage in an egalitarian direction. She convincingly illustrates her controversial position, that although divorce has its cost to society, the divorce culture empowers wives and challenges the legacy of male dominance that previously set the conditions for marriage endurance. Karla B. Hackstaff is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

In a sea of passionate literature that arouses fears about changing family values comes Hackstaff's studious exploration of marriage in the midst of a divorce culture. The author (sociology, Northern Arizona Univ.) contrasted archival case studies of couples married in the 1950s with her own case studies of people married during the 1970s to determine gender differences in the perception of roles and the marital unit itself between generations. Using these extensive studies and personal interviews, she reveals many changes and contradictions in married life in the United States. Her contention is that there are costs associated with a marriage culture as well as a divorce culture and that right now society is making a transition to general equality that is unsettling but may ultimately lead to healthier marital relationships. Hackstaff has done a scrupulous job of research and case presentation. This academic complement to Stephanie Coontz's The Way We Really Are: Coming to Terms with America's Changing Families (LJ 4/1/97) offers a more even-handed look at marriage and divorce than Barbara Dafoe Whitehead's The Divorce Culture (LJ 2/15/97). Recommended for academic and larger public libraries.ADeborah Bigelow, Leonia P.L., NJ
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"This book makes giant strides in our understanding of marriage in the modern day." -- Arlie Russell Hochschild, author of The Time Bind: When Work Becomes Home and Home Becomes Work

"This is a very important book. . . . Hackstaff has given us some brilliant insights into one of the most important social, psychological, and moral problems of our time." -- Eli Sagan, author of Freud, Women, and Morality: The Psychology of Good and Evil

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
marital work ethic, marital monitoring, marital contingency, marital endurance, hypothetical divorce, riage culture, marital meanings, divorce culture, monitoring marriage, marital cohort, relational complaints, heterosexual knots, gratifying marriage, unexpected divorce, relational equality, male provider role, divorce thoughts, divorce anxiety, therapeutic culture, widespread divorce, relational responsibilities, relational concerns, divorce option
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Paul Nakato, Vincent Dominick, Katy Stone, The Push of Marriage Culture, Doreen Dominick, Spouses Secure Equal Footing, Rearview Mirror, Mia Turner, Patrick Reeves, United States, Roxanne Kason-Morris, Promise Keepers, Evan Stone, Bureau of the Census, Dan Green, Miriam Johnson, Marie Hampton, Linda Finley, Lynn Shepard, Larry Frank, Doris Day, Janet Johnson, Debbie Nakato, Adam Harrington, Judy Green
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