Posted on 09/13/2023 4:43:25 AM PDT by DoodleBob
Marriage in the United States has been changing in many ways over the past several decades – but the tradition of women taking their husband’s last name is still going strong. In a new Pew Research Center survey, we asked married people whether they changed their last name after marriage.
Pew Research Center asked 2,437 U.S. adults in opposite-sex marriages whether they changed or kept their last name when they got married. We also asked 955 U.S. adults who have never been married what they would do if they got married. The questions used in this analysis are part of a larger survey of 5,073 U.S. adults conducted April 10-16, 2023.
Everyone who took part in the survey is a member of the Center’s American Trends Panel (ATP), an online survey panel that is recruited through national, random sampling of residential addresses. Address-based sampling ensures that nearly all U.S. adults have a chance of selection. The survey is weighted to be representative of the U.S. adult population by gender, race, ethnicity, partisan affiliation, education and other categories. Read more about the ATP’s methodology.
Here are the questions used for this analysis, along with responses, and its methodology.
Most women in opposite-sex marriages (79%) say they took their spouse’s last name when they got married. Another 14% kept their last name, and 5% hyphenated both their name and their spouse’s name.
Among men in opposite-sex marriages, the vast majority (92%) say they kept their last name. Just 5% took their spouse’s last name, and less than 1% hyphenated both names.
The numbers of women and men in same-sex marriages in the sample are too small to analyze separately.
We also asked people of all sexual orientations who have never been married whether they would change their last name if they got married.
Women who have never been married have mixed views on this: 33% say they would take their spouse’s last name, 23% would keep their last name, 17% would hyphenate both names and 24% aren’t sure.
Among men, 73% say they would keep their last name, and 20% aren’t sure. Just 4% say they would hyphenate both names and 2% say they would take their spouse’s last name.
Some women in opposite-sex marriages are more likely than others to say they kept their last name after getting married. They include:
For women who have never been married, the sample size is not large enough to look at demographic differences in what they say they would do.
Note: Here are the questions used for this analysis, along with responses, and its methodology.
“Opposite-Sex Marriages”........really?!?!?
Kinda shows why the call their surveys “Pew”.
What % of those that kept their last name, ended their egomania in divorce?
That surprises me.
““Opposite-Sex Marriages”........really?!?!?”
That was the first thing that struck me.
That whole article was probaby written just to use that phraseology, to try to mainstream it and make it the default referene for marriage and finally end our cultural view of what marriage is.
Like Miranda Veracruz De La Hoya Cardinal.
Certainly would make it easier to not have to go through any name changes after a divorce.
And then...
" The numbers of women and men in same-sex marriages in the sample are too small to analyze separately. "
IOW
marriage
the way God designed it
The other 2 kept the man’s name with which they were born.
And yet every single one of them have their fathers last name.
It must be hell living with that.
There are good and obvious reasons for a wife taking her husbands name but we ought to go back to something they used to do in the past: Using her maiden name on her tombstone. While the generation that knew her doesn’t need the info subsequent generations often do. Tombstones go from being markers placed by the bereaved to all the history anyone has, very quickly.
Beloved husband Tom Smith/Beloved wife Jane Jones.
Why does the fundamental and strictly legitimate basis of marriage and family escape some people?
The convention was to use “née” (French for born), then the maiden name.
Couldn't that be simply explained as a hold-over from the Hispanic culture? Isn't it tradition in Spain, etc. to not entirely discard the wife's surname?
Regards,
Née for females, né for males (some men change their names for a variety of reason, incl. legal adoption, etc.).
Example:
President Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr. né Leslie Lynch King Jr.
Regards,
The diamond wedding ring is just an old tradition as well. No need to retain. A plain gold band will suffice.
Does anyone really believe this nonsense “study”?
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