Have You Said "Homogamy" Today?

Have You Said "Homogamy" Today?
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Have you said "homogamy" today?

The latest issue of the Journal of Family Theory and Review is out. A young journal, in only its third volume, it's well worth a look. For example, the current issue features an interesting debate on gender display and housework between Oriel Sullivan, Esther Kluwer, Barbara Risman and Paula England.

But the big blog news is that the issue also includes "Homogamy Unmodified," in which I write:

I propose that homogamy and heterogamy be used to signify same-sex and opposite-sex unions, respectively, including marriage and cohabitation. This is intended to address a terminology impasse that has given us marriage versus same-sex marriage in popular and academic usage. After a brief review of the word origins and scholarly uses of these terms, I conclude that the new uses for homogamy and heterogamy could be adopted relatively easily, with scientific benefits for categorization, and could remove a conservative bias in the current usage.

Briefly, my issues are:
  • Trying to get consistent, accurate language going for something that will be with us for the rest of human society -- making a deliberate choice. Letting language evolve "naturally" in this case is just another way of enabling cognitive pathways that are harmful or misleading.
  • Avoiding the terms "same-sex" and "opposite-sex" because the sexes aren't opposites.
  • Not trying to get the terms "same-gender" and "different gender" going because it seems even less likely to work than homogamy and heterogamy.
  • Making the categories fit with the scientific terms we use for other issues in marriage and mating, such as those of Greek (monogamy, polygamy, hypergamy, etc.) or Latin (matrilineal, matriarchal, matrilocal, etc.) origin.
  • Not presuming we know the sexual orientation of people just because of the gender of their marriage partners (e.g., "gay marriage," "straight marriage"). That's a different issue -- highly but not perfectly correlated. Lots of gay (or bisexual) people are in heterogamous marriages.
I hope you will consider it. Try it out in a sentence. For example:
To follow some related arguments I've made, see:

Cross posted from the Family Inequality blog.

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