Women's confidants outside marriage: Shared or competing sources of intimacy?

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Abstract

This paper is concerned with describing confidant relationships outside the marital relationship in a small sample of married women at the intensive stage of the family cycle. Such confidant relationships were by no means universal: only one third of the women in this study having at least one such relationship. In the context of an ideology which extols the couple as the locus of intimacy, such relationships can be seen as potentially threatening. In fact, such a view does not appear to be warranted. These relationships had very little to do with the level of intimacy in the marital relationship. Rather, they appeared to reflect the security of the respondents’ base in the local community and their financial resources to create and maintain such relationships.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)241-254
Number of pages14
JournalSociology
Volume25
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 1991
Externally publishedYes

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