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Has Marriage for Love Failed?

ISBN: 978-0-745-68383-6

October 2013

Polity

96 pages

Description
Today we like to think that marriage is a free choice based on love: that we freely choose whom to marry and that we do so, not so much for survival or social advantage, but for love. The invention of marriage for love inverted the old relationship between love and marriage. In the past, marriage was sacred, and love, if it existed at all, was a consequence of marriage; today, love is sacred and marriage is secondary. But now marriage appears to be becoming increasingly superfluous. For the past forty years or so, the number of weddings has been declining, the number of divorces exploding and the number of unmarried individuals and couples growing, while single-parent families are becoming more numerous. Love has triumphed over marriage but now it is destroying it from inside. So has the ideal of marriage for love failed, and has love finally been liberated from the shackles of marriage?

In this brilliant and provocative book Pascal Bruckner argues that the old tension between love and marriage has not been resolved in favour of love, it has simply been displaced onto other levels. Even if it seems more straightforward, the contemporary landscape of love is far from euphoric: as in the past, infidelity, loss and betrayal are central to the plots of modern love, and the disenchantment is all the greater because marriages are voluntary and not imposed. But the collapse of the ideal of marriage for love is not necessarily a cause for remorse, because it demonstrates that love retains its subversive power. Love is not a glue to be put in the service of the institution of marriage: it is an explosive that blows up in our faces, dynamite pure and simple.
About the Author
Pascal Bruckner is the best-selling author of many books including The Tyranny of Guilt, Perpetual Euphoria and The Paradox of Love. He writes regularly for Le Nouvel Observateur.
Features
  • This is a brilliant book on the state of love and marriage today by a leading philosopher and social thinker.
  • Bruckner shows how, over the last couple of centuries in the West, the traditional relationship between love and marriage has changed: in the past, marriage was sacred and love, if it existed at all, was secondary, whereas today love is the most important thing and marriage is secondary.
  • Now, with growing rates of divorce and declining numbers of weddings, marriage itself seems to be in trouble. So is the idea of marrying for love now finished?
  • Bruckner argues that the old tension between love and marriage has not been resolved in favour of love but has simply been displaced onto other levels.
  • This sharp, original and very readable book will appeal to a wide general readership interested in the changing nature of love and marriage today.