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On TV, in film, and in "Save the Date" cards tacked to fridges everywhere, we are steeped in the cultural white noise of wedding voyeurism and schadenfreude. A new study threatens to change the conversation: The number of married Americans is at a record low. The Pew Research Center has crunched the Census data and discovered that only 51 percent of adults are married. That number plunges to 20 percent for 18-to-29-year-olds. In 2010, weddings dropped by 5 percent from the previous year.
电视里,电影里,各家各户冰箱上贴着的“婚礼日期提醒卡”(婚礼请柬)上,我们摆脱不了某种文化白噪音——我们曝露在窥探他人私密的八卦人群之间,我们浸透在幸灾乐祸的看客之中。而最近的一项调查却转变了我们的话题:美国结婚人数创历史最低纪录。美国调查机构皮尤研究中心对人口普查资料进行了分析,发现美国只有51%的成年夫妇已婚,其中18-29岁的青年中已婚人数比例跌至20%。2010年,结婚人数比2009年降低了5%。
This study is just the latest one to track a broadening of relationship choices for the youngest generation. Cohabitation is on the rise. Last year's Pew research on marriage unearths the ambivalence behind the numbers: 44 percent of Millennials feel that marriage is "becoming obsolete." So is marriage on its way out?
青年人的婚恋关系选择面在不断拓宽,这次即是对最年轻的一代进行的跟踪调查。我们发现,年轻人同居的现象日益增多。去年皮尤研究中心对婚姻的研究揭露了隐藏在数字背后的矛盾心态:44%的新千年一代认为婚姻“越来越过时了”。那么婚姻真的过时了吗?
Hardly. Scholars and sociologists say that younger generations are probably delaying marriage, but that doesn't mean we won't eventually tie the knot. "The age of marriage has reached an all-time high," says the Council on Contemporary Families' director of research, Stephanie Coontz—26.5 for brides, 28.7 for grooms. Some people may stay single forever. But Coontz warns that the number won't be as dramatic as we might think. "My guess would be that a slightly lower, but still fairly high amount of people will get married in their lifetimes—say, 84 percent as opposed to 90 percent a few years ago, or the 95 percent abberration in the 1950s."
不尽然。一些学者与社会学家表示,年轻一代很可能在延迟结婚,但并不意味永远不结婚。“平均结婚年龄已经创下空前最高纪录——新娘26.5岁,新郎28.7岁。”当代家庭协会的研究主任斯蒂芬妮·昆兹这样说道。还有一些人可能永远保持单身。但昆兹提醒我们,这个人数不会像我们想象的那么多。“我猜想,虽然结婚人数可能会减少,但依然有相当多的人会在一生中选择结婚——相对于几年前成年人中已婚人数为90%,目前则只有85%,早而在上个世纪50年代,这个比例是95%。”
Indeed, a majority of singles are hoping to walk down an aisle one day—even those in cohabiting couples—regardless of marriage's obsolescence. Therein lies the paradox: Why do we want to join an institution that, according to us, is passing its expiration date? Privately, we're choosing to live in sin or by our lonesomes. But publicly, we profess our interest in joining the oldest of romantic institutions. Or is it the other way around?