Conscious coupling: loss of public promises of a life-long bond? An exploration of authenticity and autonomy in commitment processes across contemporary long-term relationship forms
Blake, S; Janssens, A
Date: 17 March 2021
Journal
Families, Relationships and Societies
Publisher
Policy Press
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Strong mutual commitment is typically conceived to involve a public promise of a lifelong bond, but social theorists have posited that external relationship anchors are being
replaced with a private meaning of commitment. This narrative analysis of semistructured interviews with ten White-British couples in long-term relationships ...
Strong mutual commitment is typically conceived to involve a public promise of a lifelong bond, but social theorists have posited that external relationship anchors are being
replaced with a private meaning of commitment. This narrative analysis of semistructured interviews with ten White-British couples in long-term relationships (15+
years) of different forms (married, civil partners, cohabitants) explores the meaning of
commitment in contemporary relationships. The findings indicate a loss of importance
attached to public promises, with couple relationships instead guided by two distinct
commitment narratives, one of which rejects future-orientated promises of a life-long
bond. Contrary to individualisation theories however, relationship trajectories continue to
be shaped by social influences. The study raises questions regarding the growth of an
alternative moral framework for relationships and suggests theoretical conceptions of
commitment are reconsidered in light of changes in contemporary relationship practices
Institute of Health Research
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