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Sexual technology and technique
The sexual revolution that liberated (especially) female
sexual desire from
the confines of marriage, and even from love and intimacy,
would almost
certainly not have occurred had there not been available cheap
and effective
female birth control — the pill — which for the first
time severed female sexual
activity from its generative consequences. Thanks to technology,
a woman
could declare herself free from the teleological meaning of her
sexuality — as
free as a man appears to be from his. Her menstrual cycle, since
puberty a
regular reminder of her natural maternal destiny, is now
anovulatory and
directed instead by her will and her medications, serving goals
only of
pleasure and convenience, enjoyable without apparent risk to
personal health
and safety. Woman on the pill is thus not only freed from the
practical risk
of pregnancy; she has, wittingly or not, begun to redefine the
meaning of her
own womanliness. Her sexuality unlinked to procreation, its
exercise no
longer needs to be concerned with the character of her partner
and whether he
is suitable to be the father and co-rearer of her yet-to-be-born
children.
Female sexuality becomes, like male, unlinked to the future. The
new woman's
anthem: Girls just want to have fun. Ironically, but absolutely
predictably,
the chemicals devised to assist in family planning keep many a
potential
family from forming, at least with a proper matrimonial
beginning.
Sex education in our elementary and secondary schools is
an independent yet
related obstacle to courtship and marriage. Taking for granted,
and thereby
ratifying, precocious sexual activity among teenagers (and even
pre-teens),
most programs of sex education in public schools have a
twofold aim: the
prevention of teenage pregnancy and the prevention of venereal
disease,
especially AIDS. While some programs also encourage
abstinence or non-coital
sex, most are concerned with teaching techniques for "safe sex";
offspring
(and disease) are thus treated as (equally) avoidable side effects
of
sexuality, whose true purpose is only individual pleasure. (This I
myself did
not learn until our younger daughter so enlightened me, after
she learned it
from her seventh-grade biology teacher.) The entire approach of
sex education
is technocratic and, at best, morally neutral; in many cases, it
explicitly
opposes traditional morals while moralistically insisting on the
equal
acceptability of any and all forms of sexual expression provided
only that
they are not coerced. No effort is made to teach the importance
of marriage
as the proper home for sexual intimacy.
But perhaps still worse than such amorality — and
amorality on this subject is
itself morally culpable — is the failure of sex education to
attempt to inform
and elevate the erotic imagination of the young. On the contrary,
the very
attention to physiology and technique is deadly to the
imagination. True sex
education is an education of the heart; it concerns itself with
beautiful and
worthy beloveds, with elevating transports of the soul. The
energy of sexual
desire, if properly sublimated, is transformable into genuine and
lofty
longings — not only for love and romance but for all the
other higher human
yearnings. The sonnets and plays of Shakespeare, the poetry of
Keats and
Shelley, and the novels of Jane Austen can incline a heart to woo,
and even
show one whom and how. What kind of wooers can one hope to
cultivate from
reading the sex manuals — or from watching the
unsublimated and unsublime
sexual athleticism of the popular culture? ...
Crippled by divorce
The ubiquitous experience of divorce is also deadly for
courtship and
marriage. Some people try to argue, wishfully against the
empirical evidence,
that children of divorce will marry better than their parents
because they
know how important it is to choose well. But the deck is stacked
against
them. Not only are many of them frightened of marriage, in
whose likely
permanence they simply do not believe, but they are often
maimed for love and
intimacy. They have had no successful models to imitate; worse,
their
capacity for trust and love has been severely crippled by the
betrayal of the
primal trust all children naturally repose in their parents, to
provide that
durable, reliable, and absolutely trustworthy haven of permanent
and
unconditional love in an otherwise often unloving and
undependable world.
Countless students at the University of Chicago have told me
and my wife that
the divorce of their parents has been the most devastating and
life-shaping
event of their lives.3
They are conscious of the fact that they
enter into
relationships guardedly and tentatively; for good reason, they
believe that
they must always be looking out for number one. Accordingly,
they feel little
sense of devotion to another and, their own needs unmet, they
are not
generally eager for or partial to children. They are not good bets
for
promise keeping, and they haven't enough margin for generous
service. And
many of the fatherless men are themselves unmanned for
fatherhood, except in
the purely biological sense. Even where they dream of meeting a
true love,
these children of divorce have a hard time finding, winning, and
committing
themselves to the right one.
It is surely the fear of making a mistake in marriage, and
the desire to
avoid a later divorce, that leads some people to undertake
cohabitation,
sometimes understood by the couple to be a "trial marriage"
— although they are
often one or both of them self-deceived (or other-deceiving). It
is far
easier, so the argument goes, to get to know one another by
cohabiting than
by the artificial systems of courting or dating of yesteryear. But
such
arrangements, even when they eventuate in matrimony, are,
precisely because
they are a trial, not a trial of marriage. Marriage is not
something one
tries on for size, and then decides whether to keep; it is rather
something
one decides with a promise, and then bends every effort to
keep.
Lacking the formalized and public ritual, and especially the
vows or promises
of permanence (or "commitment") that subtly but surely shape
all aspects of
genuine marital life, cohabitation is an arrangement of
convenience, with
each partner taken on approval and returnable at will. Many are,
in fact,
just playing house — sex and meals shared with the rent.
When long-cohabiting
couples do later marry, whether to legitimate prospective
offspring, satisfy
parental wishes, or just because "it now seems right," post-
marital life is
generally regarded and experienced as a continuation of the
same, not as a
true change of estate. The formal rite of passage that is the
wedding
ceremony is, however welcome and joyous, also something of a
mockery:
Everyone, not only the youngest child present, wonders, if only
in
embarrassed silence, "Why is this night different from all other
nights?"
Given that they have more or less drifted into marriage, it should
come as no
great surprise that couples who have lived together before
marriage have a
higher, not lower, rate of divorce than those who have not. Too
much
familiarity? Disenchantment? Or is it rather the lack of wooing
— that is, that
marriage was not seen from the start as the sought-for
relationship, as the
goal that beckoned and guided the process of getting-to-know-
you?
Feminism against marriage
That the cause of courtship has been severely damaged by
feminist ideology
and attitudes goes almost without saying. Even leaving aside the
radical
attacks on traditional sex roles, on the worth of motherhood or
the vanishing
art of homemaking, and sometimes even on the whole male
race, the
reconception of all relations between the sexes as relations
based on power
is simply deadly for love. Anyone who has ever loved or been
loved knows the
difference between love and the will to power, no matter what
the cynics say.
But the cynical new theories, and the resulting push toward
androgyny, surely
inhibit the growth of love.
On the one side, there is a rise in female assertiveness and
efforts at
empowerment, with a consequent need to deny all womanly
dependence and the
kind of vulnerability that calls for the protection of strong and
loving men,
protection such men were once — and would still be
— willing to provide. On the
other side, we see the enfeeblement of men, who, contrary to
the dominant
ideology, are not likely to become better lovers, husbands, or
fathers if
they too become feminists or fellow-travelers. On the contrary,
many men now
cynically exploit women's demands for equal power by letting
them look after
themselves — pay their own way, hold their own doors,
fight their own battles,
travel after dark by themselves. These ever so sensitive males
will defend
not a woman's honor but her right to learn the manly art of self-
defense. In
the present climate, those increasingly rare men who are still
inclined to be
gentlemen must dissemble their generosity as
submissiveness....4
The problem is not woman's desire for meaningful work. It
is rather the
ordering of one's loves. Many women have managed to combine
work and family;
the difficulty is finally not work but careers, or, rather,
careerism.
Careerism, now an equal opportunity affliction, is surely no
friend to love
or marriage; and the careerist character of higher education is
greater than
ever. Women are under special pressures to prove they can be as
dedicated to
their work as men. Likewise, in the work place, they must do
man's work like
a man, and for man's pay and perquisites. Consequently, they
are compelled to
regard private life, and especially marriage, homemaking, and
family, as
lesser goods, to be pursued only by those lesser women who
can aspire no
higher than "baking cookies." Besides, many women in such
circumstances have
nothing left to give, "no time to get involved." And marriage,
should it come
for careerist women, is often compromised from the start, what
with the
difficulty of finding two worthy jobs in the same city, or
commuter marriage,
or the need to negotiate or get hired help for every domestic
and familial
task.
Besides these greater conflicts of time and energy, the
economic independence
of women, however welcome on other grounds, is itself not an
asset for
marital stability, as both the woman and the man can more
readily contemplate
leaving a marriage. Indeed, a woman's earning power can
become her own worst
enemy when the children are born. Many professional women
who would like to
stay home with their new babies nonetheless work full-time.
Tragically, some
cling to their economic independence because they worry that
their husbands
will leave them for another woman before the children are
grown. What are
these women looking for in prospective husbands? Do their own
career
preoccupations obscure their own prospective maternal wishes
and needs?
Indeed, what understanding of marriage informed their decision
to marry in
the first place?
Not ready for adulthood
This question in fact represents a more subtle, but most
profound, impediment
to wooing and marriage: deep uncertainty about what marriage
is and means,
and what purpose it serves. In previous generations, people
chose to marry,
but they were not compelled also to choose what marriage
meant. Is it a
sacrament, a covenant, or a contract based on calculation of
mutual
advantage? Is it properly founded on eros, friendship, or
economic advantage?
Is marriage a vehicle for personal fulfillment and private
happiness, a
vocation of mutual service, or a task to love the one whom it has
been given
me to love? Are marital vows still to be regarded as binding
promises that
both are duty-bound to keep or, rather, as quaint expressions of
current
hopes and predictions that, should they be mistaken, can easily
be nullified?
Having in so many cases already given their bodies to one
another — not to
speak of the previous others — how does one understand
the link between
marriage and conjugal fidelity? And what, finally, of that first
purpose of
marriage, procreation, for whose sake societies everywhere have
instituted
and safeguarded this institution? For, truth to tell, were it not for
the
important obligations to care for and rear the next generation,
no society
would finally much care about who couples with whom, or for
how long.
This brings me to what is probably the deepest and most
intractable obstacle
to courtship and marriage: a set of cultural attitudes and
sensibilities that
obscure and even deny the fundamental difference between
youth and adulthood.
Marriage, especially when seen as the institution designed to
provide for the
next generation, is most definitely the business of adults, by
which I mean,
people who are serious about life, people who aspire to go
outward and
forward to embrace and to assume responsibility for the future.
To be sure,
most college graduates do go out, find jobs, and become self-
supporting
(though, astonishingly, a great many do return to live at home).
But, though
out of the nest, they don't have a course to fly. They do not
experience
their lives as a trajectory, with an inner meaning partly given by
the life
cycle itself. The carefreeness and independence of youth they do
not see as a
stage on the way to maturity, in which they then take
responsibility for the
world and especially, as parents, for the new lives that will
replace them.
The necessities of aging and mortality are out of sight; few feel
the call to
serve a higher goal or some transcendent purpose.
The view of life as play has often characterized the young.
But, remarkably,
today this is not something regrettable, to be outgrown as soon
as possible;
for their narcissistic absorption in themselves and in immediate
pleasures
and present experiences, the young are not condemned but are
even envied by
many of their elders. Parents and children wear the same cool
clothes, speak
the same lingo, listen to the same music. Youth, not adulthood,
is the
cultural ideal, at least as celebrated in the popular culture. Yes,
everyone
feels themselves to be always growing, as a result of this failed
relationship or that change of job. But very few aspire to be fully
grown-up,
and the culture does not demand it of them, not least because
many prominent
grown-ups would gladly change places with today's 20-
somethings. Why should a
young man be eager to take his father's place, if he sees his
father running
away from it with all deliberate speed? How many so-called
grown-ups today
agree with C. S. Lewis: "I envy youth its stomach, not its heart"?
...
Deeper cultural causes
So this is our situation. But just because it is novel and of
recent origin
does not mean that it is reversible or even that it was avoidable.
Indeed,
virtually all of the social changes we have so recently
experienced are the
bittersweet fruits of the success of our modern democratic,
liberal,
enlightened society — celebrating equality, freedom, and
universal secularized
education, and featuring prosperity, mobility, and astonishing
progress in
science and technology. Even brief reflection shows how the
dominant features
of the American way of life are finally inhospitable to the
stability of
marriage and family life and to the mores that lead people self-
consciously
to marry.
Tocqueville already observed the unsettling implications of
American
individualism, each person seeking only in himself for the
reasons for
things. The celebration of equality gradually undermines the
authority of
religion, tradition, and custom, and, within families, of husbands
over wives
and fathers over sons. A nation dedicated to safeguarding
individual rights
to liberty and the privately defined pursuit of happiness is, willy-
nilly,
preparing the way for the "liberation" of women; in the absence
of powerful
non-liberal cultural forces, such as traditional biblical religion,
that
defend sex-linked social roles, androgyny in education and
employment is the
most likely outcome. Further, our liberal approach to important
moral issues
in terms of the rights of individuals — e.g., contraception
as part of a right
to privacy, or abortion as belonging to a woman's right over her
own body, or
procreation as governed by a right to reproduce — flies in
the face of the
necessarily social character of sexuality and marriage. The
courtship and
marriage of people who see themselves as self-sufficient rights-
bearing
individuals will be decisively different from the courtship and
marriage of
people who understand themselves as, say, unavoidably
incomplete and
dependent children of the Lord who have been enjoined to be
fruitful and
multiply....
The natural obstacle
Not all the obstacles to courtship and marriage are cultural.
At bottom,
there is also the deeply ingrained, natural waywardness and
unruliness of the
human male. Sociobiologists were not the first to discover that
males have a
penchant for promiscuity and polygyny — this was well
known to biblical
religion. Men are also naturally more restless and ambitious than
women;
lacking woman's powerful and immediate link to life's generative
answer to
mortality, men flee from the fear of death into heroic deed, great
quests, or
sheer distraction after distraction. One can make a good case
that biblical
religion is, not least, an attempt to domesticate male sexuality
and male
erotic longings, and to put them in the service of transmitting a
righteous
and holy way of life through countless generations.
For as long as American society kept strong its uneasy
union between modern
liberal political principles and Judeo-Christian moral and social
beliefs,
marriage and the family could be sustained and could even
prosper. But the
gender-neutral individualism of our political teaching has, it
seems, at last
won the day, and the result has been male "liberation" —
from domestication,
from civility, from responsible self-command. Contemporary
liberals and
conservatives alike are trying to figure out how to get men "to
commit" to
marriage, or to keep their marital vows, or to stay home with the
children,
but their own androgynous view of humankind prevents them
from seeing how
hard it has always been to make a monogamous husband and
devoted father out
of the human male.
Ogden Nash had it right: "Hogamus higamus, men are
polygamous; higamus
hogamus, women monogamous." To make naturally polygamous
men accept the
conventional institution of monogamous marriage has been the
work of
centuries of Western civilization, with social sanctions, backed
by religious
teachings and authority, as major instruments of the
transformation, and with
female modesty as the crucial civilizing device. As these mores
and sanctions
disappear, courtship gives way to seduction and possession, and
men become
again the sexually, familially, and civically irresponsible
creatures they are
naturally always in danger of being. At the top of the social
ladder,
executives walk out on their families and take up with trophy
wives. At the
bottom of the scale, low-status males, utterly uncivilized by
marriage,
return to the fighting gangs, taking young women as prizes for
their prowess.
Rebarbarization is just around the corner. Courtship, anyone?
The final of three excerpts from Kass's
essay continues next week. The first excerpt
is available here.
Footnotes
3 In years past, students identified with Hamlet because of his desire to make a difference in the world. Today, they identify with him because of his "broken home" -- the death of his father and the too-hasty remarriage of his mother. Thus, to them it is no wonder that he, like they, has trouble in his "relationships."
4 Truth to tell, the reigning ideology often
rules only people's tongues, not their hearts. Many a young
woman secretly hopes to meet and catch a gentleman, though
the forms that might help her do so are either politically
incorrect or simply unknown to her. In my wife's course on
Henry James' The Bostonians, the class's most strident feminist,
who had all term denounced patriarchy and male hegemonism,
honestly confessed in the last class that she wished she could
meet a Basil Ransom who would carry her off. But the way to her
heart is blocked by her prickly opinions and by those of the
dominant ethos.
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