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History of Feminism
Related: About this forumAmelia Earhart's Surprisingly Modern Prenup
The publisher George Palmer Putnam proposed to Amelia Earhart six times before she agreed to marry him. First, she served him a letter detailing some things which should be writ before we are married. She would not be faithful: I want you to understand I shall not hold you to any midaevil code of faithfulness to me nor shall I consider myself bound to you similarly, Earhart wrote. She would not quit flying: Please let us not interfere with the others work or play. And she would not commit to forever: I must exact a cruel promise and that is you will let me go in a year if we find no happiness together. They married on Feb. 7, 1931.
I stumbled upon Earharts prenup last week, nestled in Purdues online library of her letters. I posted it to my Tumblr. Hundreds of women approved. Earharts prenup has been quoted before, but it seems to have struck a chord at this particular point in relationship history. Lori Adelman of Feministing called it a pretty darn modern vision of marriage. At the Frisky, Amelia McDonell-Parry also praised Earharts incredibly modern view, including expressing her weariness of the institution itself, and then laying out her expectations for such a union, which include a willingness to be monogam-ish and a need for privacy and respect for her career aspirations.
Earhart wrote her views on marriage over 80 years ago, but it speaks to our contemporary ambivalence about the institution. The marriage rate among adults in the U.S. has dropped steadily over the past 50 years, from 72 percent in 1960 to 51 percent in 2010. The average American now marries at the tail end of his or her 20s, not the beginning. (Earhart married at 33, when the average age for a womans first marriage was 21.) But though 39 percent of Americans feel marriage is becoming obsolete, most of us still say we would like to marry someday. There are those of us who yearn for our casual relationships to turn into marital commitments, and others who break after years of sworn spinster or bachelorhood. And yet we remain wary of the legal hassles, entrenched gender inequalities, and lingering social expectations that accompany the marriage contract.
So like Earhart, we attempt to assert our individuality even as we agree to tether ourselves to a pair. We all sign the same papers, then proclaim our marriages will be different. Like Liz Lemon, we protest about the absurdity of the thing that we are doing (or as one woman wrote in response to Earharts letter, My prenup with Seth just says hot dogs, written on a napkin). And we stage indie ceremonies to avoid the conservative trappings of the traditional package.
I stumbled upon Earharts prenup last week, nestled in Purdues online library of her letters. I posted it to my Tumblr. Hundreds of women approved. Earharts prenup has been quoted before, but it seems to have struck a chord at this particular point in relationship history. Lori Adelman of Feministing called it a pretty darn modern vision of marriage. At the Frisky, Amelia McDonell-Parry also praised Earharts incredibly modern view, including expressing her weariness of the institution itself, and then laying out her expectations for such a union, which include a willingness to be monogam-ish and a need for privacy and respect for her career aspirations.
Earhart wrote her views on marriage over 80 years ago, but it speaks to our contemporary ambivalence about the institution. The marriage rate among adults in the U.S. has dropped steadily over the past 50 years, from 72 percent in 1960 to 51 percent in 2010. The average American now marries at the tail end of his or her 20s, not the beginning. (Earhart married at 33, when the average age for a womans first marriage was 21.) But though 39 percent of Americans feel marriage is becoming obsolete, most of us still say we would like to marry someday. There are those of us who yearn for our casual relationships to turn into marital commitments, and others who break after years of sworn spinster or bachelorhood. And yet we remain wary of the legal hassles, entrenched gender inequalities, and lingering social expectations that accompany the marriage contract.
So like Earhart, we attempt to assert our individuality even as we agree to tether ourselves to a pair. We all sign the same papers, then proclaim our marriages will be different. Like Liz Lemon, we protest about the absurdity of the thing that we are doing (or as one woman wrote in response to Earharts letter, My prenup with Seth just says hot dogs, written on a napkin). And we stage indie ceremonies to avoid the conservative trappings of the traditional package.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2012/12/11/amelia_earhart_s_marriage_prenup_i_won_t_be_faithful_i_won_t_stop_working.html?wpisrc=obinsite
Kind of interesting.
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Amelia Earhart's Surprisingly Modern Prenup (Original Post)
ismnotwasm
Jan 2013
OP
NYC_SKP
(68,644 posts)1. Her letter to her male counterpart (it's hard to even call him a lover) are frank and honest.
I read about this a week or two ago, and her words are brutally honest and do not portray what one might call a great deal of passion or commitment.
Rather, it seems very much like an "understanding" she's willing to enter into, and somewhat hesitantly, it seems to me.
Very interesting, indeed!
K/R
ismnotwasm
(42,022 posts)2. Perhaps it was this
You must know again my reluctance to marry, my feeling that I shatter thereby chances in work which means most to me, she told Putnam. I feel the move just now as foolish as anything I could do. I know there may be compensations but have no heart to look ahead.
But you're right, she almost seems puzzled.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)3. i know. love it. thanks for this. real interesting. nt