Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 178
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4422-5418-3 • Hardback • January 2016 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4422-5419-0 • eBook • January 2016 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Subjects: Family & Relationships / Parenting / Parent & Adult Child,
Family & Relationships / General,
Family & Relationships / Alternative Family,
Family & Relationships / Love & Romance,
Family & Relationships / Marriage & Long-Term Relationships,
Family & Relationships / Parenting / General,
Psychology / General,
Psychology / Human Sexuality,
Psychology / Interpersonal Relations,
Psychology / Psychotherapy / Couples & Family,
Psychology / Emotions
Deborah M. Merrill is professor of sociology at Clark University. She is the author of Mothers-in-Law and Daughters-in-Law: Understanding the Relationship and What Makes Them Friends or Foe and Caring for Elderly Parents: Juggling Work, Family, and Care Giving in Middle And Working Class Families. She is also the author of When Your Children MarryHow Marriage Changes Relationships with Sons and Daughters.
1. Introduction
2. “Coming Out”
3. Relationships between Parents and Their Gay and Lesbian Children
4. The Effect of Same-Sex Marriage on Parent and Adult Child Relationships
5. Why Marry and the Division of Labor in the Home
6. Gay and Lesbian Couples Raising Children
7. The Effect of Sexual Orientation on the Couple’s Marriage
8. Same-Sex Marriage and the Extended Family
9. “Doing Family” and Advice to Families
10. Conclusion
Appendix 1: Methodology
[The] new research . . . published in Merrill’s latest book, When Your Gay or Lesbian Child Marries: A Guide for Parents . . . is actually quite astounding.
— LAVENDER
Merrill's new analysis of changes in parent-adult relationships when a homosexual child marries builds on her valuable and insightful parallel study of what happens to parent-child relationships when a heterosexual child marries. She finds, at least for parents whose relationships survive the child's 'coming out,' that paradoxically, parents of lesbian daughters gain a loving daughter with fewer of the strains that often emerge when a son-in-law arrives to compete for their daughter's attention, and parents of gay sons not only gain another son but are much less likely to suffer the fate of many parents of sons, who see their child absorbed into his wife's family. Its implications go far beyond the focal question about how to survive the marriage of a homosexual child, by raising questions about the ways gender structures so many family relationships.
— Fran Goldscheider, Brown University
This book is a must read for anyone who wants to know more about gay and lesbian couples and their families. It is thorough, well written, and relevant to today’s changing world. It is a particularly important book for parents who have gay and lesbian adult children – they will learn a great deal from reading it.
— Jane Ariel, PhD, psychology professor, Wright Institute in Berkeley