The men and women in Rubin’s study entered marriage with deeply gendered but
unspoken dreams of the future: “For her, the realization of her womanhood—a home
and family of her own. For him, the fulfillment of his manhood—a wife to care
for him, sons to emulate him, and daughters to adore him. For both, an end to
separateness, to loneliness.” But economic hardship forced these young people to
grow up quickly, and soon their dreams gave way to the hard reality of married
life, where expectations of a “good life” shrank to signify one in which
unemployment, violence, and alcoholism were rare. The women in Worlds of Pain
were discontented by the lack of emotional connection in their relationships and
the burden of balancing paid labor and child rearing. The men felt overburdened
by the strain of providing for a growing family and angry at their inability to
fulfill their wives’ emotional needs. Still, they stayed married, anchoring
their commitments in distinctive gender roles, mutual dependence, and,
sometimes, a lack of alternative options.
Nearly forty years after the publication of Worlds of Pain, I sat across from
Allie, a thirty-year-old white secretary, at a small Irish pub on the outskirts
of Lowell. Allie launched breathlessly into her coming of age narrative before I
could even open my menu. “In your early twenties you think you have it all
mapped out already, and then life throws you a curveball, and you start at
square one. And it is like, oh no, what do I really want out of life? Where do I
want to go, what do I want to do?” I met Allie through her father, a
white-haired police officer who eagerly wrote down her phone number on a paper
napkin for me. “She’s young, pretty, but just hasn’t met the right guy yet,” he
beamed. What he left out of his description, I would soon come to find out, was
that Allie was recently divorced. This omission proved to be an important clue
in understanding the generational cleavages that divide Allie’s visions of
successful intimacy—and adulthood—from that of her parents.
Allie grew up in what Rubin would have termed a “settled” working-class
family: her parents were high school sweethearts who married in their late
teens, had Allie and her brother in their early twenties, and had weathered the
ups and downs of marriage for over three decades. Brought up with “old school
traditions and values,” Allie lived with her parents while earning a two-year
administrative degree and then began work as a secretary. At church with her
family one Sunday, she ran into Jake, the son of her parents’ old friends, and
the two quickly became inseparable, marrying soon after she turned twenty-three.
In hindsight, Allie explains that she was trying hard to follow the well-trodden
path of her parents—even though something about it didn’t quite feel right.
Recalling the day Jake proposed, she confided:
We were at my parents’ house and he came downstairs and said, “Close your
eyes, I have a surprise for you.” I was thinking he had candy or something. I
probably would have been more excited about that. I could feel him in my face,
like, “why are you so close to me?,” and when I opened my eyes he was down on
one knee with the ring. And I kind of, my heart sank, like this wasn’t special.
. . . I’m in my pajamas and I look like hell. So you know I acted surprised but
I was so disappointed and I felt horrible that I felt disappointed. It just
wasn’t special and I think I knew then that it wasn’t . . . that chemistry was
missing. But hey, you live and learn. And I did not go through all that stuff to
make that mistake again. Oh, no.
As Allie acknowledges hesitantly and even guiltily, what she wanted was
chemistry—psychic satisfaction, a sense of uniqueness, of self-fulfillment. What
she got instead was a relationship full of tension over housework, gender
obligations, and money, culminating in the painful realization that they could
not cope with the “pressures and expectations” of married life. Allie and I
discussed:
A: We just grew apart. He . . . I don’t want to say he was responsible, I am
responsible for 50 percent of why it didn’t work, even though I didn’t realize
that fully at the time. You know I went through a lot of counseling to get my
head on straight again and figure out where I wanted to go and what I wanted to
do and accept my part of responsibility for it not working. So, we had gone
through counseling together as a couple too, separation counseling. Just to get
us on the same track because I was the one that asked for the divorce. I was
very unhappy and I knew that I couldn’t make him happy. He really wanted a
family and was pressuring me for it. At that point I didn’t know if I ever
wanted kids.
JS: What was holding you back?
A: Money. Money and, um, he was never home. And I felt like I was a single
parent taking after him anyway because he is messy and I am like, there is no
way I can have a baby and do this full-time and have the baby and him never
home. We were barely scraping by as it was money-wise. I didn’t think it was
good timing, and there was a little missing maternal piece to me for a very long
time. Until I had my nephews, I had never been around babies and I had no
interest in them. And when we got married, we said next year we will think about
it. Next year came, and neither one of us were ready, and the next year, he was
like, I am ready, and I was still not ready. So we said okay, another year, and
by that time, I was like, I don’t know if I ever really want kids. I mean, you
see how your parents’ relationship went—they got married and had kids and bought
the house at a young age, and my brother followed that too. . . . It’s a lot of
pressure being the black sheep of the family, divorced with no
kids.
While Allie idealized her parents’ smooth transition from marriage to
children to home ownership in their early twenties, this path felt neither
authentic nor viable to her. She undertook a central ritual of
adulthood—marriage—but her performance felt empty: she could not convince
herself of its legitimacy. Reflecting on their divorce, Allie sighed: “I feel
like I am eighteen playing in the adult world.”
The Intimacy Trap
Since the courtships and marriages of Allie’s parents and grandparents, men’s
labor power has diminished, prompting women’s mass entrance into the workforce.
The gendered division of labor at the core of industrial society has become
unworkable, thereby releasing men and women from the traditional roles and
expectations that once anchored partners, for better or worse, in the
institution of marriage. Simultaneously, through its efforts to combat gender
discrimination in the workplace; legalize no-fault divorce, contraception, and
abortion; and promote educational equality, the Second Wave feminist movement
also sparked a decline in the legitimacy of gendered marriage, empowering women
to leave marriages that were unequal, abusive, or emotionally unfulfilling.
In the wake of these momentous social transformations, young people like
Allie are finding that their relationships are less and less determined by
external moral, religious, and legal codes. Consequently, intimacy must be
increasingly negotiated “from individual biographies, from discussing and
questioning each step, finding new arrangements, meeting new demands, justifying
one’s decisions.” While Allie’s parents’ relationship was based on distinct
social obligations, a gendered division of labor, a lack of choices, and a
shared history that bound them together, Allie felt a strong pull to be true to
her authentic feelings and protect her own interests. Enabled by her earning
power in the labor market as well as the availability of birth control, she
rejected the traditional role performed by her own mother: she became angry at
her husband’s refusal to share equally in domestic tasks and chose to postpone
childbearing because she wanted, and needed, to continue to work full-time. Her
husband, in response, felt betrayed by her rejection of traditional marital
roles: like Rubin’s male respondents, he yearned for “a wife to care for him,
sons to emulate him, and daughters to adore him” even though he in turn could
not fulfill the traditional, masculine provider role.
Allie and Jake were thus trapped, haunted by the meanings of traditional
adulthood but unable to make them work within the constraints of their daily
lives. Ultimately, Allie prioritized equality and emotional satisfaction over
marriage: she could not be happy in a relationship that forced her to pull a
“second shift” of housework and sacrificed her interests, opinions, and desires.
In doing so, Allie illustrates the power of the modern cultural ideal of love
and marriage as therapeutic:
This therapeutic attitude . . . begins with the self rather than with the set
of external obligations. The individual must find and assert his or her true
self because this self is the only source of genuine relationships to other
people. External obligations, whether they come from religion, parents, or
social conventions, can only interfere with the capacity for love and
relatedness. Only by knowing and ultimately accepting one’s self can one enter
into valid relationships with other people.
As scholars of intimacy and modernity have documented, in place of
traditional marriage, a new cultural ideal of romance and love has developed: a
“pure relationship” of “sexual and emotional equality, which is explosive in its
connotations for preexisting forms of gender power.” The ethos of modern love is
predicated on the autonomy, rather than the mutual dependence, of partners: “The
principle of autonomy entails open discussion about the respective rights and
obligations of the partners, and the contract may be renegotiated or voided if
the relationship is perceived as unfair or oppressive.” Marriage has been
rendered more equitable, but also much more fragile.
Giddens celebrates the emancipatory features of modern intimacy, and he is
certainly right to do so in the sense that the pure relationship empowers
people—and women in particular—to hold greater control over their romantic
destinies. However, as Illouz has demonstrated, making this new kind of
relationship “work” in everyday life may require a particular set of emotional,
linguistic, and material resources that are more accessible to the professional
middle classes than to the working class. For Allie and her ex-husband, concerns
about money, and the affordability and desirability of children in particular,
drove a wedge in their relationship that ultimately led to their divorce.
Marriage and child rearing once represented core milestones of adulthood, yet
their relevance to adulthood may be fading: while 95 percent of Americans
consider education, employment, financial independence, and the ability to
support a family to be important steps on the path to adulthood, only half
believe that it is necessary to marry or to have children to be considered an
adult. Today’s young men and women are waiting longer to get married, as
evidenced by the fact that at age thirty, only 46 percent of women and 31
percent of men are married, compared to 77 percent of women and 65 percent of
men in 1960. They are also less likely than their Baby Boomer counterparts to
stay married—23 percent of marriages end in divorce in the first five years,
while half of marriages end in divorce within fifteen years—or to have children
all together.
While these statistics may be read as a commentary on the declining value of
marriage and family, a closer look reveals that they are more accurately a story
of inequality—not only of the economic benefits of married such as pooled
material resources, but also of symbolic and emotional goods such as lasting
ties, trust, and love itself.
While nine out of ten college-educated women wait to have children until after
they get married, only six out of ten with a high school degree postpone
childbearing until after marriage, which means that the material and symbolic
benefits of marriage (e.g., pooled income and assets, less financial risk in
making large purchases) accrue to those already born in the top of the income
distribution. These patterns are particularly pronounced for black couples,
whose divorce rate is even higher.
Among the 100 working-class young people in my sample, only eighteen are
married, while fifty-six identify as single, twenty-one as dating or cohabiting,
and five as divorced. I find that most are trapped between the rigidity of the
past and the flexibility of the present. On one hand, young people express
anxiety over the fragility of commitment, yearning nostalgically for the
lifelong marriages of the past. They long for enduring relationships, based not
solely on personal happiness but also on transcendent roles and obligations that
ensure stability over time. Indeed, many single men and women avoid entering
relationships precisely because they would rather be alone than loosely and
tentatively attached. On the other hand, respondents speak of a desire to form
therapeutic or “pure” relationships that nurture their deepest selves, meet
their personal needs, and, most important, do not weigh them down with emotional
or financial obligations.
Economic and social vulnerability only exacerbate this tension: indeed, both
models are rendered fragile by the strain of job insecurity and the
privatization of risk. Among informants who were single (56), dating (21), or
divorced (5), fear—of being deemed unworthy, of losing their selves, of
betrayal, of failing and losing what little they have—dominated their
experiences in the romantic sphere. For those who were married, the family
became a constant battleground where they wrestled with these fears and their
longing for solid, lasting ties. In an era when economic and social shocks such
as job loss, illness, or disability are the responsibility of the individual
alone, intimacy becomes yet another risk to bear, especially for black men and
women who carry the additional burden of racism in both the labor and the dating
market. The unpredictability, insecurity, and risks of everyday life come to
haunt young people within their most intimate relationships, not only by
shrinking their already limited pool of available social resources but also by
disrupting their sense of security, destabilizing their life trajectories, and
transforming commitment into yet another risky venture. Children remain the last
bastion of commitment and stability— yet the social institutions in which young
parents create families often work against their desire to anchor their lives in
connection with others.
1 comments:
Thanks for sharing.I found a lot of interesting information here. A really good post, very thankful and hopeful that you will write many more posts like this one.
https://notepad.software/
vidmate.onl
https://filezilla.software/
Post a Comment