Is Marriage for White People?

Is Marriage for White People?
Author Ralph Richard Banks
Publisher Dutton
Publication date
2011
ISBN ISBN 978-0-525-95201-5
OCLC 635459419

Is Marriage for White People?: How the African American Marriage Decline Affects Everyone is a non-fiction book by Ralph Richard Banks, a writer and Stanford Law School professor. He concludes that "single is the new black", which poses serious problems for the African American community. He recommends that black women open themselves up to be willing to enter serious relationships with men of other races and backgrounds, and he argues this will improve black men and women alike.[1]

Contents

Banks states that for African American women, it is considered the norm to go through life unmarried and to raise children as a single mother. Specially, he notes the statistics that nine in ten black women married in the 1950s while three in ten currently do so. He writes that this is largely caused because those women will not consider dating men of other races besides their own. He states that Asian and Latino women marry men of other races three times more than black women.[1]

He writes about a variety of specific reasons that black women are so uninterested. He states that many women prefer the cultural "swagger" that they perceive only in black men, whereas other women idealize their fathers and can't imagine marrying who is particularly different. He recounts that some black women believe that non-black men are simply uninterested in them. He views this as important but partly dismisses it, citing a 2009 University of California–Irvine study of OkCupid that found that some men of other races respond to black women's profiles at higher rates than black men.[1]

He views the aforementioned trend as a serious problem for African Americans in general since this prevents solid, nuclear families from forming that strengthen both the parents and the children. Banks criticizes feminists who believe that women forgoing marriage and raising children on their own is inherently good and represents a victory against retrograde patriarchy. He states that people's desire to find a life-time partner to be intimate with is innate across race and culture, and he recounts that the black women without romantic success feel depressed, not elated.[2]

He writes, "If fears of interracial intimacy keep people separate now, it is because those fears embody the echo of the past. Many of us continue to act out the roles we first began to inhabit long ago. We scarcely stop to consider that we might change the script."[1]

Reviews and responses

John H. McWhorter wrote for City Journal, "Banks’s book will stand as a poignant description of a generation of accomplished women who discovered that the tribalist impulse their parents fostered in them— parents for whom that impulse was a necessity— has become an obstacle to finding marriage partners in multicultural America.[1]

Columnist David French wrote for the conservative website National Review Online,

"Only the foolish think their own families are immune to powerful cultural forces. At the same time, no cultural trend is irreversible, and voices like Professor Banks’s are indispensable not only in preserving perhaps our culture’s most vital institution but also in opening the eyes and hearts of a generation whose view of their own options is perhaps too narrow."[3]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 John H. McWhorter (September 2, 2011). "Marrying Out". City Journal. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  2. http://www.salon.com/life/feature/2011/09/04/marriage_and_race_interview
  3. French, David (August 8, 2011). "‘Is Marriage for White People?’". National Review Online. Retrieved January 1, 2012.