trinityvixen: (thinking Mario)
[personal profile] trinityvixen
What could we do about the marriage practice of changing one spouse's last name (usually the wife's) to the other's that would make the practice a) entirely gender-independent and b) practical for multiple generations?

The best I can figure is that both partners have to change their name in some fashion. Either they would do it upon marrying--John Doe and Jane Smith would pick or be given third, new name, say "Brown"--or they would keep their names but give any children a new one.

That would certainly fulfill requirement a), but I'm still not sure that it's an attractive solution to the problem of b). Unless the parents took the new name and passed that on, having children with a different name from the parents is awkward and inelegant.

What do you all think?

Oh, and please, bear in mind that issues of being able to track genealogy are lesser concerns to me. We live in an age with adequate resources for tracking down that sort of information if you want to build family trees. I don't think "being able to trace/link back to our ancestors" is an effective argument against adopting a new system of nomenclature. Issues of how couples would choose new names are fair game though. I imagine we'd get plenty of crank names as the internet generations get married, to say nothing about the few folk who would expose their ignorance and/or bigotry by appropriating names from cultures not their own (or enhancing their link to diluted bloodlines with usurpation of old names).

Date: 2009-03-27 08:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com
There's a difference between "having a choice" and making one. Technically, you have a choice when it comes to lots of things, but it becomes an issue of what is convenient, a, and what you can afford, b, and what is considered "acceptable" or not. Right now, with our defaulting to old ways of name-taking, there is "a choice" not to, but those who want to do it differently from the norm have a hard time doing so. They still can but it takes a lot more effort. That barrier, that inertia, to freedom of choice removes the "freedom" part.

Date: 2009-03-27 08:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droidguy1119.livejournal.com
Well, like I said, that's the other part I don't really see as true either. I think a considerable portion of people stick with tradition because they like it, not because it's easier or they have a hard time doing otherwise. Several girls I know are going to choose to take their husband's name because they feel it's a romantic part of getting married, even though I know they're against gender inequality and would otherwise put up a fight. I think you're underestimating the number of people out there who actually appreciate the tradition the way it is.

Date: 2009-03-27 09:35 pm (UTC)
ext_7448: (ambiguous)
From: [identity profile] ahab99.livejournal.com
And you really think it's coincidence that it's always the woman who happens to think it's romantic to take her partner's name and that it's always the man who never even considers whether he should consider changing his name instead?

Date: 2009-03-28 03:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droidguy1119.livejournal.com
I don't think guys care at all. I know I don't. If I was getting married and my fiancee asked me to change to her name, that'd be fine with me.

Date: 2009-03-28 07:15 pm (UTC)
ext_7448: (captain jack sparrow)
From: [identity profile] ahab99.livejournal.com
Aaaaaand it's precisely that ability to not worry at all about the issue and have no inherent consequences that is part of the privilege.

Date: 2009-03-28 07:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droidguy1119.livejournal.com
That's only half true. I don't think there are any consequences if women don't worry about it.

Date: 2009-03-28 08:53 pm (UTC)
ext_7448: (*surprise*)
From: [identity profile] ahab99.livejournal.com
We aren't just *inventing* the social pressure in this situation. Women face a choice, and both options carry a social meaning that isn't there for men. You can change to your husband's name, thus giving up your own. Even if you contend that most people just accept this without worry, the fact is that it comes from a very property-based ownership system and that *has meaning* (apathy about meanings that exist is not the same thing as those meanings not existing at all). Or you can keep your name, which means, in all likelihood, having a different name than your children, constantly being called the wrong name anyway (because everyone will default to Mrs. [Husband]), and always carrying a mark that you've *bucked the norm*. I've even had people try to analyze it - "Why would she keep her name? She must have had a special connection to her father's family or be a raging man-hating feminist or something!" No, she just wanted to do what men take for granted every day - not having to be judged in maintaining one's own name, regardless of one's marital state.

I think you're missing out what I was saying about privilege, though - you're having trouble seeing what the meaning and power at play here is precisely because you seem to be in a position to not have to deal with it. It's the same thing with "Ms." and "Mrs." - they each have a meaning, and there's no equivalent to "Mr." which carries no specific information at all. I have to choose explicitly between marking that I'm married or marking that I'm rejecting the default state, which in some circles *still* has a negative connotation (and in any circle it still carries that extra information because women are supposed to make it obvious whether they're available or not). This may seem like a little issue in the grand scheme, but it connects to exactly the same gendered power dynamics that cause problems in other. It does actually matter.

Date: 2009-03-28 11:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droidguy1119.livejournal.com
I mentioned in another post, I think these things are generally a lot more likely when there's more than one factor involved, such as a religion that might make it twice as traditional to go with the husband's name. But, I'm 23, and I presume you are too, and I'd be shocked that the average person within our own age group, man or woman within the same age group, whether you were familiar with them or not, would react negatively to taking your husband's name, keeping your own, or devising a compromise. I'm just saying I don't think there's any pressure from anywhere amongst my friends and people within my age group over this issue, that for this generation, the "norm" would be making an independent choice about it regardless of tradition.

In any case, anyone who really IS going to put up a stink that someone didn't do it the old way is going to put up a stink whether the rules are changed or not, and I really doubt they're going to do more than that: put up a stink. I would be pretty surprised to get hit with actual, serious discrimination over it, but I'm more than willing to admit that I probably don't know the extent of it. In any case, if I did take my wife's name and faced any sort of prejudice over it, I think I'd probably just wear it even more as a badge of honor. It just seems like a lot more worry over what other people think about it rather than what it means to you. Fuck 'em if they don't like it.

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