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License to Wed - What Legal Marriage Means to Same-Sex Couples (Hardcover, New)
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License to Wed - What Legal Marriage Means to Same-Sex Couples (Hardcover, New)
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A critical reader of the history of marriage understands that it is
an institution that has always been in flux. It is also a decidedly
complicated one, existing simultaneously in the realms of religion,
law, and emotion. And yet recent years have seen dramatic and
heavily waged battles over the proposition of including same sex
couples in marriage. Just what is at stake in these battles? This
book examines the meanings of marriage for couples in the two first
states to extend that right to same sex couples: California and
Massachusetts. The two states provide a compelling contrast: while
in California the rights that go with marriage--inheritance,
custody, and so forth--were already granted to couples under the
state's domestic partnership law, those in Massachusetts did not
have this same set of rights. At the same time, Massachusetts has
offered civil marriage consistently since 2004; Californians, on
the other hand, have experienced a much more turbulent legal path.
And yet, same-sex couples in both states seek to marry for a
variety of interacting, overlapping, and evolving reasons that do
not vary significantly by location. The evidence shows us that for
many of these individuals, access to civil marriage in
particular--not domestic partnership alone, no matter how
broad--and not a commitment ceremony alone, no matter how
emotional--is a home of such personal, civic, political, and
instrumental resonance that it is ultimately difficult to
disentangle the many meanings of marriage. This book attempts to do
so, and in the process reveals just what is at stake for these
couples, how access to a legal institution fundamentally alters
their consciousness, and what the impact of legal inclusion is for
those traditionally excluded. Kimberly Richman is Associate
Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies at the University of San
Francisco.
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