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Foregrounding the background examining the spatial context of black-white intermarriage in 1990 /Bratter, Jenifer Lynelle. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International.
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Factors influencing the marital stability of older black couples /Johnson, Cynthia Elaine January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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Race, romance and desire in interracial relationships : Asians/Asian Americans and white AmericansNemoto, Kumiko, 1970- 03 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Feminists and marriage: a qualitative analysisBlaisure, Karen R. 26 February 2007 (has links)
Feminist critiques have demonstrated the problematic nature of marital and family life for women. Feminism has deconstructed traditional marriage and made apparent the potential overwhelming cost to women in financial, emotional, and physical dimensions. However, the experience of feminists who choose heterosexual marriage has not been addressed through research. What is not known is the extent to which such feminists are transforming marriage into a relationship that values both spouses.
This study examined the influence feminism had on the marriage of heterosexual partners who were both self-identified feminists at the time of the study and prior to marriage. The guiding focus of the research asked what happens when feminists, dedicated to equality and the valuing of both spouses, choose to marry. Thus, the following research questions were posed: How do couples describe the impact of their feminist beliefs on their marriages? To what extent do couples talk about having a double consciousness of marriage, i.e., a realization of choosing a relationship that can lead to the devaluation of the woman? How do couples describe and interpret equality and inequality in their marriages? How does gender organize the couples' marriages and lives?
The conceptual framework informing this study was a combination of feminist and general systems perspectives, A general systems perspective provided concepts such as system, process, and context while a feminist perspective elaborated on these concepts to illuminate the sociohistorical and cultural contexts in which women and men live and the power differentials within marriages. A feminist postmodern perspective highlighted the social construction of relationships and gender and the diversity of women's experience while also proposing a political agenda, i.e., criteria of what is liberating for women and a critique of the gendered nature of power differentials.
Qualitative interviewing was the main method of data collection. Participants were recruited through referrals and advertisements placed in regional newspapers and regional and state newsletters of the National Organization for Women. Ten couples participated in the study. Criteria for inclusion in the study included the following: both the woman and the man assumed the label feminist prior to marriage; they believed women had historically and culturally been devalued and they worked against that devaluation in their own relationship; they were married for at least 5 years; and they were willing to be interviewed jointly and individually. The 20 participants (10 couples) were white, highly educated, and middle- to upper middle-class. They ranged in age from 30 to 77 years old. Length of marriage ranged from 5 to 22 years; the average was 11 and 1/2 years.
A mixture of being raised by parents exhibiting behaviors typically associated with the other gender, the impact of the second wave of feminism as it hit college campuses in the late 1960s and 1970s, and the observation or direct experience of discrimination either in the classroom or in the workplace created a fertile soil in which the origins of feminist beliefs were encouraged to take root. Sharing similar world views was crucial in the couples' development of a relationship in which the woman felt safe to critique direct and observed instances of gender injustice. Men also initiated and participated in this criticism, thereby indicating their support of feminism.
The blend of traditional and feminist ideological roots produced a reclamation of marriage. Couples described feminism as influencing their beliefs about equality within marriage by providing standards for interaction and motivating women to demand appropriate treatment and men to demand more from themselves in terms of relationship work. They discussed the double consciousness of married heterosexual feminists by relating their strategies for interacting with one another and the larger society. Through the process of communication, the couples built equality, but at times, i.e. through discourse, they also concealed inequality. Participants’ lives were organized by the gendered experiences of feminism as life-saving for women and life-enhancing for men.
Moments of subordination and moments of empowerment were present in these marriages. The women described their attempts at going beyond the false dichotomy of children or career and the stereotype of the super woman to a form of marriage that required a second adult in the home who was willing to take on parenting and household responsibilities. These attempts were easy for some couples and more of a struggle for others. However, in all of these marriages, evidence existed of women's and men's dedication to equality and choices for women, awareness of the privileged status of men in society, and arrangement of their relationships to benefit women as well as men. Feminism provided the ideological and practical guidance to couples for this reclamation of marriage. / Ph. D.
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The long-term role of newlywed conscientiousness and religiousness in marriageJarvis, Mark Owen 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Vietnamese American attitudes toward intercultural and interracial marriageKhong, Regina 01 January 2005 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis was to examine the attitudes of Vietnamese Americans towards Vietnamese interracial marriages. It also sought to extend previous research in this field and incorporate insights regarding the literature of Vietnamese, Vietnamese- American, and American culture to the literature that addresses the question of interracial marriage. The research question of this paper was, "What are the attitudes of Vietnamese Americans toward interracial marriage between Vietnamese Americans and other races?"
The methodology used was a self-administered anonymous questionnaire given to a limited group of Vietnamese participants in California to gather their views on this subject. The results suggest that the Vietnamese surveyed are more accepting of interracial marriages than the literature would suggest.
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THIRD GENERATION JAPANESE AMERICAN WOMEN'S SELF-ESTEEM CORRELATED WITH THEIR ATTITUDES TOWARD INTERRACIAL DATING AND MARRIAGE.Miyata, Isabelle Yoshiko. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Race, Ethnicity and Attitudes Toward Same-Sex Unions in the United StatesPlesa, Claudia 01 January 2011 (has links)
Recent political and cultural trends have led to an evaluation of the meaning of marriage within American society, and especially marriage as it concerns couples of the same sex. However, little research has been done to find out how attitudes toward same-sex marriage might vary according to race and ethnicity. Drawing on data from the 2004 National Politics Study, the author investigates same-sex marriage attitudes and tests hypotheses concerning the attitudes of various American race-ethnic groups. This study employs multinomial logistic regression analysis to compare attitudes of African Americans, Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites. Results indicate that even when socio demographic factors such as education and gender are controlled for, ethnic groups still differ in their attitudes toward this topic. Analyses also indicate that the relationship between race/ethnicity and attitudes toward same-sex unions does not vary by gender and that foreign birth explains the relationship between Hispanic ethnicity and attitudes toward same-sex marriage.
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Different worlds? : asymmetry in graduate student marriagesSakashita, Shari S. 24 July 1996 (has links)
That graduate study is detrimental to marriages has received empirical
support. This study utilized systems theory to examine and help explain the
dissolution process of graduate student marriages. Specifically, it examined the
impact of marital structure on perceptions of marital quality. Drawing primarily
from Scheinkman's (1988) qualitative study, spouses in asymmetrical marriages
(i.e., marriages where only one spouse is in graduate school), as opposed to
symmetrical marriages (i.e., marriages where both spouses are in graduate
school), were hypothesized to report (a) less satisfaction with the division of
household labor, (b) lower perceptions of equity, and (c) less satisfaction with
emotional intimacy. These, in turn, were hypothesized to lower perceptions of
marital quality.
Participants from a list of master's and doctoral-level students at a west
coast university in the United States were randomly selected and contacted by
phone. Only married students and their partners were solicited for participation.
The final sample consisted of 121 married individuals (60 husband-wife pairs, 1
female) who responded to a mailed questionnaire. Of these 121 respondents,
85 were involved in asymmetrical arrangements and 36 in symmetrical
arrangements.
Contrary to expectations, asymmetry did not indirectly (and negatively)
affect marital quality through satisfaction with the division of household labor
and perception of equity. There was, however, some evidence that asymmetry
negatively influenced marital quality by lowering spouses' satisfaction with
emotional intimacy. This latter finding was considered to be meaningfully
significant because satisfaction with emotional intimacy was by far the strongest
predictor of marital quality.
The findings are discussed primarily in terms of the education level of
each spouse. Reconceptualizing asymmetry as an educational or power
differential, or even more generally as a difference in emotional experiences, is
recommended. In other words, it is not the number of spouses in school per se
that matters; it is the understanding and emotional connectedness between
them. / Graduation date: 1997
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Incentives in education and marriageGevrek, Deniz, 1980- 29 August 2008 (has links)
Choices pertaining to education, marriage and migration generally have profound impacts on individuals' lives. This dissertation focuses on the role of incentives in decisions involving education, interracial marriage and migration. To this end, Chapter 2 initiates a new line of research that investigates the role of self-employed parents on their children's post-graduation plans and college success. Chapter 2 reveals that self-employed parents affect their offspring's college success even after accounting for possible ability bias and controlling for various individual characteristics. While Chapter 2 focuses on the role of parental occupation on students' incentives to succeed in college, Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 investigate intricate relationships among education, interracial marriage, the anti-miscegenation laws, and migration in the U.S. Chapter 3 introduces a study that links previous literatures on the migration of blacks in the U.S. during the Great Migration with anti-miscegenation laws and interracial marriage. Chapter 3 concludes that anti-miscegenation laws in individuals' states of birth affected the sorting of inter- and intraracially married black males into destination states differentially. Chapter 4 contributes to the previous literature on the determinants of black-white marriages by focusing on the impact of geographical variation of the distributions of black and white education and individual education on interracial marriage. / text
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