Jan 15, 2009
E.J. Graff On Love and Marriage: Only Recently Together Like a Horse and Carriage
Speaking with NPR, E.J. Graff, author of What is Marriage For? The Strange Social History of Our Most Intimate Institution, makes an original and compelling argument in favor of gay marriage.
She convincingly makes the case that during the industrial revolution, between 1850 and 1950, heterosexuals began to question the tradition of marrying for property, economic status, familial alliance, business partnership etc., and started marrying for love. This shift was the most significant “redefinition” of “marriage” in its millennium-long history, and it was carried out by straight people. Graff goes on to claim that homosexuals’ desire to take part in this new kind of marriage is a direct result of the spread of this novel concept of marriage. Same sex marriage, then, is not the cause of marriage redefinition, but the fitting result.


