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Family Issues, Family - Assorted Topics, Social Sciences - General & Miscellaneous, Weddings, Marriage, Gay & Lesbian Studies
Recognizing Ourselves: Ceremonies of Lesbian and Gay Commitment by Ellen Lewin β€” book cover

Recognizing Ourselves: Ceremonies of Lesbian and Gay Commitment

by Ellen Lewin
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Overview

In April 1993, as part of the March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation, hundreds of couples participated in "the Wedding," a symbolic commitment ceremony held in front of the Internal Revenue Service building. Part protest and part affirmation of devotion, the event was a reminder that marriage rights have become a major issue among lesbians and gay men, who cannot marry legally and can only claim domestic partner rights in a few locations in the United States. Yet despite official lack of recognition, same-sex wedding ceremonies have been increasing in frequency over the past decade.

Ellen Lewin, who has consecrated her own lesbian relationship with a commitment ceremony, decided to explore the myriad ways in which lesbians and gay men create meaningful ceremonies for themselves. She offers the first comprehensive account of lesbian and gay weddings in modern America. A series of richly detailed profiles -- the result of extensive interviews and participation in the planning and realization of many of these commitment rituals -- is woven together to show how new traditions, and ultimately new families, are emerging within contemporary America.

Just as the book is a moving portrait of same-sex couples today, it is also a significant political document on a new arena in the struggle for lesbian and gay rights. In a larger sense, Lewin's work is about the politics surrounding same-sex marriages and the ramifications for central dimensions of American culture such as kinship, community, morality, and love.

Lewin explores the ceremonies themselves, which range from traditional church weddings to Wicca rituals in the countryside, with portraits of the planning, the joys, and the anxieties that led up to the weddings. She introduces Bob and Mark, a leather fetishist couple who sanctified their love by legally changing their last names and exchanging vows in tuxedos, leather bow ties, and knee-high police boots. In an equally absorbing profile, Lewin describes Khadija, from a working-class black family deeply suspicious of whites (and especially Jews) and Shulamith, raised in a Zionist household. She tells of how the two women struggled to reconcile their widely disparate upbringings and how they ultimately combined elements of African and Jewish traditions in their wedding. These, among many other stories, make Recognizing Ourselves a vivid tapestry of lesbian and gay life in post-Stonewall United States.

Columbia University Press

Synopsis

Lewin explores the intersections of kinship, community, morality, and love bound up in same-sex marriage through the experiences of lesbian and gay couples who have sanctified their relationships in commitment ceremonies. Through detailed profiles, Lewin provides the first comprehensive account of lesbian and gay weddings in America.

Evan Wolfson

As gay people advance toward sharing in the freedom to marry that our non-gay brothers and sisters take for granted, this book is a rich reminder that at the heart of the civil rights struggle are the couples themselves. . . . Lewin's account helps explain why gay couples will win the freedom to marry, and the sky won't fall.

About the Author, Ellen Lewin

Ellen Lewin is professor of anthropology and women's studies at the University of Iowa. She is the author of Lesbian Mothers: Accounts of Gender in American Culture, coeditor, with William Leap, of Out in the Field: Reflections of Gay and Lesbian Anthropologists, and editor of Inventing Lesbian Cultures in America.

Reviews

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Editorials

San Francisco Bay Times

Not a how-to guide, but rather profiles and portraits of same-sex marriages intertwined with the surrounding politics.

Esther Newton

In the best tradition of public, thought-provoking, and accessible anthropology pioneered by Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict, this elegantly written account of gay and lesbian marriage ceremonies brings both empathy and discernment to bear on queer culture and politics in the making. Interweaving moving narratives and rituals with wide ranging cultural criticism, Lewin provides an analytic frame for understanding American cultureΒ΄s evolving values about kinship, love, and commitment.

Kath Weston

A sensitive treatment of the cultural issues associated with the debate on gay marriage. Lewin does an exceptional job of conveying why weddings -those most ordinary of extraordinary rituals -should have become so compelling to a wide range of lesbians and gay men.

Choice

Lesbian and gay commitment ceremonies are shown to dramatize key issues not only in their culture but also in the wider American culture. Written in a nonscientific but professional manner, the book offers further stimulus for a change in laws to provide legal recognition for same-sex marriages.

Evan Wolfson

As gay people advance toward sharing in the freedom to marry that our non-gay brothers and sisters take for granted, this book is a rich reminder that at the heart of the civil rights struggle are the couples themselves. . . . Lewin's account helps explain why gay couples will win the freedom to marry, and the sky won't fall.

San Francisco Bay Times

Not a how-to guide, but rather profiles and portraits of same-sex marriages intertwined with the surrounding politics.

Library Journal

Lewin (Inventing Lesbian Cultures in America, Beacon, 1996), who describes herself as a "married lesbian," seeks to "fashion a cultural understanding of lesbian and gay weddings as powerful and complex ritual occasions." Her book opens with a discussion of the current legal and political status of same-sex marriage but focuses mostly on individual commitment ceremonies and the analysis of how these rituals relate to the themes of tradition, family, community, authenticity, and resistance. As opposed to many recent books, e.g., Becky Butler's Ceremonies of the Heart: Celebrating Lesbian Unions (Seal Pr.-Feminist, 1997), meant to help couples design their own ceremonies, this work is a scholarly, anthropological analysis of the ceremonies themselves. As legalizing same-sex marriage is currently being hotly debated, this work provides an important look at the meaning of the ceremonies for those involved. Recommended for academic libraries.Debra Moore, Loyola Marymount Univ. Lib., Los Angeles

Booknews

Lewin (anthropology and women's studies, U. of Iowa), a lesbian who has been through a commitment ceremony with her partner, uses numerous profiles to provide an in-depth account of lesbian and gay weddings in America. She examines the legal, ethnic, social, psychological, and political issues involved in individual ceremonies, including several large events such as the April 1993 National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation and the mass lesbian and gay marriage in San Francisco in March of 1996. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1999
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Pages
288
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780231103930

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