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The Cultural Power of Law and the Cultural Enactment of Legality: The Case of Same-Sex Marriage
Authors:Kathleen E. Hull
Affiliation:Kathleen E. Hull;is assistant professor, Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota. She thanks the following people for their helpful feedback at various stages: Scott Barclay, Wendy Espeland, Wendy Griswold, Elizabeth Hoffman, Erin Kelly, Anna-Maria Marshall, Robert Nelson, Laura Beth Nielsen, and Mary Rose.
Abstract:This paper examines the legal consciousness of same-sex couples with respect to marriage. Data from an interview-based study of 71 members of same-sex couples reveal strong consensus on the desirability of having samesex relationships legally recognized, and considerable variation in couples'attempts to enact marriage culturally through various practices, including the use of marriage-related terminology and public commitment rituals. I argue that some of these efforts to enact marriage culturally should also be read as attempts to enact legality in the absence of official law. The findings from this study challenge the idea that marginalized social actors will tend toward a resistant legal consciousness: Rather than seeking to avoid and evade legality in their everyday lives, most same-sex couples seem to embrace legality for its practical and symbolic resources, even as they stand "against the law" in their opposition to the exclusion of same-sex couples from the institution of legal marriage. Approaching marriage from the perspective of same-sex couples, this research demonstrates that the legal and cultural aspects of marriage are deeply intertwined. Cultural enactments of marriage enact legality even in the absence of official law, and many actors ascribe to law a cultural power that transcends its specific benefits and protections, the power to produce social and cultural equality.
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