MarriageFree & Boycott
MarriageFree Books & Links

AtMP partners with Powell's Books.  If you click a book title on this page and purchase the book from Powell's, a portion of your purchase will support AtMP!  In fact, any Powell's purchase that starts from the search box above will support our work! 

AtMP especially thanks these authors and organizations for their partnership and support*.


Books

* Cutting Loose: Why Women Who End Their Marriages Do So Well by Ashton Applewhite (1998).
Contrary to the image of the financially-strapped, emotionally-exhausted divorcee, this book tells the stories of women who thrived after leaving unhappy relationships and offers encouragement and advice on surviving divorce. Written by an AtMP board member.

* Here Comes the Bride: Women, Weddings, and the Marriage Mystique , by Jaclyn Geller (2001).
A scathing critique of the institution by a feminist who argues that it's not OK to get married. Geller focuses particular attention on how marriage proposals, engagement announcements, wedding invitations, brides, wedding dresses, and weddings themselves are represented in popular culture.To read our full review of this book, check out our July 2001 Update.

* Heterosexual Women Changing the Family: Refusing to be a 'Wife'! by Jo Van Every (1995).
About women in a variety of "anti-sexist living arrangements," both married and unmarried.

Marriage Shock: The Transformation of Women into Wives by Dalma Heyn (1997).
Based on interviews and surveys with married women, Heyn chronicles how women change -- often for the worse -- after they get married. Although Heyn concludes that more "conscious" marriages could prevent what she calls "marriage shock," some of us might find her data another good reason not to get married. We found this book to be a fascinating read.

* Unmarried to Each Other: The Essential Guide to Living Together as an Unmarried Couple, by Dorian Solot and Marshall Miller (2002).
Not everyone interviewed for this book is childfree, but many are, and it contains lots of stories and advice on choosing life without wedding rings. Written by AtMP's founders. You can also support AtMP by buying this book from us online.

* The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap by Stephanie Coontz (1992) and

* The Way We Really Are: Coming To Terms With America's Changing Families by Stephanie Coontz (1997)
This pair of books by historian Stephanie Coontz offer clarifying insights into how families have and have not changed -- based on actual information, instead of alarmist "family values" hand-wringing. These are not anti-marriage books, but they do offer a more realistic look at contemporary families.

White Weddings: Romancing Heterosexuality in Popular Culture by Chrys Ingraham (1999).
In this book, Chrys Ingraham provides a much-needed critique of the $35 billion dollar a year wedding industry. Just as Coca-Cola sells soft drinks, the wedding industry's product is marriage, and its magazines, advertising, and billboards are yet another source of the pressure to marry. To read our full review of this book, check out our May 1999 Update.

Lifework: What Marriage Really Means for Women, by Susan Maushart (2001).
The role of "wife" is one feminists critiqued harshly in the '60s and '70s, but since that time the assumption seems to be that gender roles in marriage have changed. In Wifework, Susan Maushart shows that they have not -- or not nearly enough. To read our full review of this book, check out our February/March 2002 Update.

* Women Who May Never Marry: The Reasons, Realities, and Opportunities by Leanna Wolfe (1993).
This fascinating book, written by a feminist anthropologist, explores the multitudes of reasons women might not be married, focusing mostly on women who are not in relationships (as opposed to women in unmarried relationships).

MarriageFree Links

Alternatives to Marriage Live Journal
Messageboards about alternatives to marriage. This site is independent of the Alternatives to Marriage Project, despite the similarity in name.

Alternatives to Marriage Project Store
Buy t-shirts and mugs with slogans like, "Don't marry, be happy" and "I'd get married but I don't approve of the lifestyle." All profits support AtMP's work for unmarried people!

Anti-Marriage Shop
T-shirts, sweatshirts, mugs, and more with slogans like "Friends don't let friends get married" and "Marriage is like a roll of toilet paper...".

Books Critical of Traditional Marriage
This annotated bibliography by James Park lists twelve books on the subject, most printed in the 1970s and 80s.

The Case Against Matrimony
This Salon.com article by Larissa Phillips, a woman raising a child in a long-term unmarried relationship, asks, "If marriage is risky, doomed and expensive, why bother?"

Legitimize Bastardy!
This article from a 1996 issue of the Secular Humanist Bulletin argues why humanists should oppose marriage, calling it "a corrupt, misogynistic, and outmoded institution."

Lucy Stone League
An organization that advocates for "name choice freedom," protesting that 3 million women each year abandon their names when they get married.

Marriage and Love, by Emma Goldman (1911)
This article from nearly a century ago shows that those of us who prefer not to marry have a long and respectable history. In her essay, radical activist Emma Goldman argues that marriage is a failure and a poor investment, especially for women. Amusingly, she cites the 8% divorce rate as one of her items of proof, even though in comparison to today's numbers 8% would be a rate many would celebrate!

Marriage Traditions in Various Times and Cultures
This page counters the idea that there is one form of "traditional marriage" by tracing the many forms marriage has taken in different historical eras and cultures, from the Bible to the British-American colonies. 

Straight Marriage Under Protest
This article by Sarah Deer explores options for male-female couples who are concerned about how to use their privilege responsibly, since the option of getting married is not available to same-sex couples anywhere in the country.

 

 
So You Want To Support the Boycott, But You're Already Married?
Not everyone is able to take part in the Marriage Boycott. Maybe you're already married, or maybe staying unmarried isn't an option for you because you need an essential legal benefit of marriage (like the right to sponsor a partner for immigration purposes). You can still count yourself as a proud Marriage Boycott supporter! Here are some ways you can help:
  • Make a donation to the Alternatives to Marriage Project. Marriage's legal rights and benefits have a significant dollar value -- what is being married worth to you? How much do you save on health insurance, tax benefits, legal documents, and peace of mind knowing your spouse will always be recognized as your next of kin? Consider donating that amount, or part of it, to help make these rights and protections available to a wider variety of relationship and family forms.
  • Let us know you're a supporter. Stand up and be counted! It would be valuable to have an estimate of how many unmarried couples are taking part in the Boycott, and another estimate of how many additional married couples consider themselves Boycott supporters.
  • If you're having a wedding or celebrating an anniversary, use the event to educate your friends. Tell them what you believe about same-sex marriage, and maybe even encourage them to give donations in your honor in lieu of gifts. Many couples have listed in their wedding registries donations to the Alternatives to Marriage Project and other groups working for LGBT rights -- you can let people know on your own, or use the wedding registry sites Felicite.com or JustGive.org. In addition to the Alternatives to Marriage Project, consider donations to groups like Lambda Legal Defense and GLAD.
  • Vote for politicians who support equal marriage rights for same-sex couples. 
  • Be an ally to gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people. Check out these sites for ideas of things you can do:
 
Marriage Boycott

On November 3, 2009, Maine voters took away same-sex couples' right to marry, even though their lawmakers had been willing to grant this right. In response, many different-sex couples are deciding to boycott marriage. We invite you to join this growing grassroots movement!

Why Boycott Marriage?
How to Boycott Marriage
Further Reading

 

Why Boycott Marriage?

Since AtMP was founded in 1998, hundreds of people have told us that they refuse to marry because of their solidarity with same-sex couples. Scattered around the country, religious congregations are joining the boycott by refusing to conduct wedding ceremonies until everyone has the right to marry.

For some people, the issue is intensely personal: they have a friend or relative in a same-sex relationship who wants to marry and can't. For others, the issue is political: it's about fairness and equality.

After 2008 court decisions in California and Connecticut stated that domestic partnerships and civil unions were unacceptably unequal to marriage, many people (including most of us here at AtMP) hoped that this would be the year that voters would turn their backs on marriage discrimination.  Unfortunately, a slim majority of California voters chose Proposition 8, eliminating the right of same-sex couples to marry.  Equally disappointing, voters in Arizona, Arkansas and Florida also chose discrimination over fairness and respect for all relationships. 

AtMP members had mobilized against these ballot measures.  Volunteers registered new voters, phoned fellow members, posted flyers, and encouraged their friends and family to Vote No.  Like other activists, AtMP members are frustrated and disappointed at the election results.  To everyone who worked so hard for fairness, we say Thank you and Congratulations! The voting margins are getting smaller, and more people than ever understand that it's time to get government out of the marriage business. 

How to Boycott Marriage 

WHAT YOU CAN DO

 

  • Tell us. Nearly 300 couples have already joined AtMP's informal Boycott Registry! Join them today! Please be sure to tell us whether you're willing totalk to the media - reporters love to cover this story, especially in February and June. Then sign the pledge at National Marriage Boycott.
  • Tell your friends and family. You know people are curious about why you're not marrying or postponing your wedding. A boycott depends on people knowing that it's happening. More people need to have a stake in ending marriage discrimination.  If your mother or grandmother knows you won't tie the knot until everyone else can, maybe she'll vote no on the next ballot measure.  If you're a web-savvy social networker, sign up on the National Marriage Boycott's Marriage Boycott Ning page.
  • Tell the world. Publicize your position by posting this badge on your blog or website. Wear it on your sleeve with AtMP's unique t-shirt. Or, wear it on your ring finger with the Equality Ring from National Marriage Boycott.
  • Protect yourselves legally. Any unmarried couples, same-sex or different-sex, who plans to be in an unmarried relationship for any length of time, should work with a lawyer or use self-help legal forms to create basic legal protections like a will, health care proxy, and cohabitation agreement. See our Legal Issues section to get you started.
  • Have a commitment ceremony. It's possible to have a religious marriage (or a religious blessing on your relationship) without a civil marriage, or to celebrate your relationship without having a wedding. Since these options are also available to same-sex couples, some different-sex couples decide they are most comfortable with this option. To learn more about it, see the Ceremonies section of this website or check out the chapter on how to plan a non-legal wedding or commitment ceremony in Unmarried to Each Other.
  • Register your Domestic Partnership if your city or state offers a registry.  Be sure to find out what rights and responsiblities you'll be getting - the rules are different in each place.
  • If you're already married, you could even consider getting divorced!  Or you could eschew some of the social priviledge by simply referring to each other as "partner" instead of husband and wife.  For more options in between these two extremes, click here.
  • Stop recognizing marriages. Just as some congregations and officiants no longer perform legal marriages, you can stop attending weddings or stop referring to married people as husband and wife.
  • Support the Alternatives to Marriage Project. We need your help to make the boycott grow.

    https://www.networkforgood.org/donation/MakeDonation.aspx?ORGID2=043513466

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    https://www.networkforgood.org/donation/MakeDonation.aspx?ORGID2=043513466

     

     

    • Further Reading:

       

      "Standing on Ceremony" by Erik Baard in The Village Voice.

      "Life After Knight: A Call for Direct Action and Civil Disobedience" by Eric Rofes. This piece was written in 2000 after the passage of the Knight Initiative in California.

      "Support Queer Friends -- Boycott Marriage" by Brandi Sperry.

      "Is it Time to Boycott Marriage Yet?" by Eric Scheie.

      "You Are Cordially Invited to... Boycott Marriage"

       
      MarriageFree
      Go directly to these practical resources, or read the section overview below.

       

      Food for Thought
      Commitment Ceremonies
       Domestic Partnerships

      Lots More to Read:

      Research on Being Marriagefree 

       

      Ways to Get Involved:

      Sign Marriage Boycott Pledge
      Marriage Boycott 411
      Become an Ally
      Promote AtMP

       

      Know of a Great Marriagefree Book or Link?

       

      donate.png Overview:

       

      We use the term "marriagefree" to refer to people who have made a conscious decision not to get married, or are actively opposed to marriage. It includes single people and those in relationships. The term is related to the idea of "childfree," people who choose not to have children but object to the term "childless," which implies they are lacking something. Unmarried people who are marriagefree feel their lives (and/or their relationships) are whole and complete without marriage.

      Not everyone involved with the Alternatives to Marriage Project would put themselves in this category. Many hope or plan to marry someday. Some can't marry. Some are boycotting marriage temporarily, until same-sex couples have the right to marry. And many AtMP supporters are already married. But obviously, an organization called the Alternatives to Marriage Project needs space for the subgroup of people who want to stay as far away from marriage as they possibly can. If that's you, you've come to the right place. Most marriagefree types take a "to each his/her own" attitude, and don't care if other people get married, as long as their decision not to is respected. Others think anyone who participates in the institution is making a big mistake.

      In this Marriagefree neck of the woods, no one will ask you why a nice girl/boy like you hasn't tied the knot yet. Some resources that might interest you are below.

      Marriagefree Books & Links

      Do you have marriagefree books, links, or other resources you'd recommend? Let us know so we can add them to this collection!