![]() Thus, the structural realities of marriage match the Hollywood notion of love, even if individuals’ internal emotional states do not always fit that mold. Swidler argues that this is because the institutional structure of marriage matches the myth: “.despite the prevalence of divorce, marriage still has this structure: One is either married or not (however ambivalent the underlying feelings may be) one cannot be married to more than one person at a time marrying someone is a fateful, sometimes life-transforming choice and despite divorce, marriages are still meant to last.” All of these features are congruent with the mythic ideal, with its focus on one true love, life-altering decisions, and permanent alliances. When her interview subjects spoke of marriage as an institution, they were more likely to use the language of mythic love. Because of its dual nature, Americans think about it in both mythic and prosaic ways. Marriage, Swidler points out, is both an institution and a relationship. To explain how individuals can hold both of these understandings of love simultaneously, Swidler delves into the nature of marriage. Finally, prosaic realists acknowledge that love does not always last forever. The prosaic realist interpretation also maintains that “there is no ‘one true love.’” And contrary to the image of romantic love presented by Tristan and Isolde or Romeo and Juliet, prosaic realism holds that the love that leads to marriage should not be based on the reckless “defiance of social conventions.” Instead, the fewer obstacles there are to love, the better. “Prosaic-realism” contends that love is not “sudden or certain,” but instead may be “ambivalent and confused.” Rather than being apparent at first sight, it may develop gradually. ![]() made in defiance of social forces.and resolving the individual’s destiny.” Many of Swidler’s interview subjects drew upon this meaning of love and simultaneously used an alternative vision, which Swidler termed the “prosaic-realist” idea of love. Briefly tracing the history of the idea of love, Swidler argues that from at least the eighteenth century on, romantic love has been idealized as “a clear, all-or-nothing choice.of a unique other. She examines why the Americans she interviewed continued to invoke a “mythic” or “Hollywood” understanding of love while simultaneously expressing skepticism about such an ideal. With this understanding of culture established, Swidler sets to work examining how Americans use various understandings of love to interpret their own situations and beliefs. ![]() Swidler argues that people are most likely to employ their cultural repertoire when they are at points of transition, when their lives are “unsettled.” Individuals deploy those that are useful at particular moments. Not all parts of culture are consistent with each other indeed some elements contradict others. Rejecting the idea that these actions can be read to uncover a pervasive, coherent, and all-encompassing cultural ethos, Swidler argues instead that men and women rely on different strands of culture as the need arises. ![]() Culture helps people organize their actions. Talk of Love is based on the idea that individuals use culture as a tool kit or “repertoire,” choosing useful elements or strategies when they fit particular needs or circumstances. Swidler combines these first-hand accounts of romance, marriage, and divorce with highly theoretical discussions of how culture operates to shape people’s understandings of love. The book is based largely on interviews which Swidler and her research assistants conducted with 88 middle-class Americans in and around San Jose, California in the early 1980s. What is romantic love? How do people know when they have found it? What cultural tools do they have at hand to shape their romantic expectations and perceptions? These are some of the central questions which sociologist Ann Swidler sets out to answer in Talk of Love: How Culture Matters.
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