TY - JOUR
T1 - Through ‘thick and thin’ as long as it is healthy
T2 - shared meanings of commitment in long-term couple relationships, whether married or not
AU - Blake, Sharon
AU - Janssens, Astrid
N1 - Funding Information:
The initial study was funded by an alumna donation to the University of Exeter. The writing of this paper received no funding and the views expressed within are those of the authors only. We are indebted to the couples who kindly took the time and had the courage to share their relationship experience. Our thanks also go to Professor Anne Barlow and Dr Jan Ewing for their feedback on an early draft of this paper and the anonymous reviewers for their constructive advice.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Social theorists have suggested relationship practice changes such as rising rates of nonmarital cohabitation imply external anchors are lifting with relations become increasingly individualized and fragile. These suppositions are in part based on theories of commitment which have taken conventional characteristics of marriage as a blueprint from which to compare. Reporting findings from an in-depth qualitative study in England, in this paper, what it means to be committed and how commitment is displayed within 10 long-term (15 plus years) couple relationships across forms (same-sex, opposite-sex, married, civil partnership, cohabitant) is explored. The findings challenge conventional signifiers by which cohabitants are deemed less committed than married couples. In line with the individualization thesis, couples described an importance attached to autonomy and equality. Instead of public promises for a lifetime together, sexual intimacy and financial interdependence, couples displayed commitment through mutual reciprocity. However, these' individualized' relationships were not sustained only to the extent of personal satisfaction. Moral consistency values to stick together through adversity, unless the relationship became unhealthy, signified what it meant to be committed; whether the relationship was formalized or not. Further research is needed to develop theories of commitment which better reflect the diversity of contemporary relationship practices.
AB - Social theorists have suggested relationship practice changes such as rising rates of nonmarital cohabitation imply external anchors are lifting with relations become increasingly individualized and fragile. These suppositions are in part based on theories of commitment which have taken conventional characteristics of marriage as a blueprint from which to compare. Reporting findings from an in-depth qualitative study in England, in this paper, what it means to be committed and how commitment is displayed within 10 long-term (15 plus years) couple relationships across forms (same-sex, opposite-sex, married, civil partnership, cohabitant) is explored. The findings challenge conventional signifiers by which cohabitants are deemed less committed than married couples. In line with the individualization thesis, couples described an importance attached to autonomy and equality. Instead of public promises for a lifetime together, sexual intimacy and financial interdependence, couples displayed commitment through mutual reciprocity. However, these' individualized' relationships were not sustained only to the extent of personal satisfaction. Moral consistency values to stick together through adversity, unless the relationship became unhealthy, signified what it meant to be committed; whether the relationship was formalized or not. Further research is needed to develop theories of commitment which better reflect the diversity of contemporary relationship practices.
KW - civil partnerships
KW - cohabitants
KW - cohabitation
KW - Commitment
KW - individualization
KW - marriage
KW - married
KW - qualitative research
KW - unmarried
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85110462902&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13229400.2021.1952889
DO - 10.1080/13229400.2021.1952889
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85110462902
SN - 1322-9400
VL - 29
SP - 595
EP - 611
JO - Journal of Family Studies
JF - Journal of Family Studies
IS - 2
ER -