THE USES OF HISTORY IN THE PRESS AND IN COURT DURING CALIFORNIA'S BATTLE OVER PROPOSITION 8:  Casting Same Sex Marriage as a Civil Right
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| Author:  | Li, Anqi | 
| Year: | 2012 | 
| Pages: | 124 | 
| ISBN: | 0-7734-2637-X 978-0-7734-2637-5 | 
| Price: | $139.95 + shipping | 
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Li sees through the media’s white noise on the issue of same sex marriage to discover that opponents of Proposition 8 often made claims about the past to sway public perception.  These arguments were based on claims evoking a historical sense of the institution of marriage, but to a certain extent they were untrue.  This book attempts to dispel some of the misperceptions around the concept of marriage in a historical context.  Li also shows that homosexual and heterosexual couples are not exactly the same, and marriage is differently understood.  She goes above and beyond merely explicating how the media covered the story, to delve into larger social influences at play in society.
Reviews
“She has chronicled for future researchers a breakthrough moment when new ideas and ideals of marriage crossed what Post has called ‘the porous membrane separating constitutional law from constitutional culture’… by creating a historical record of the voices of non-judicial actors.”
	-Prof. Dean Smith,
	University of North Carolina
“This is a much-needed analysis of the role that newspapers play in social, political, and legal dynamics about issues that have profound moral consequences.”
		-Prof. Tyler Curtain,
		Duke University
“Her interpretation of her findings and their implications for the field are excellent and suggest this work could have a long shelf life.”
	
         -Prof. Barbara Friedman,
	University of North Carolina
Table of Contents
Foreword
Chapter 1: Journalistic and Judicial Thoughts on History and Marriage
	Introduction
	Looking Back: Definitions and Uses of History
		Processing the Past: How Narratives Emerge
		Reporting the Past: History in Newspapers
		Judging the Past: History in the Courts
		Putting the Past to Work: Uses and Abuses of History
	
	Moving Forward: The Rise of Marriage Discourse
		Who Participated: Same-Sex Couples and Marriage
		What the Law Said: Marriage Narratives in the Courts
What the Public Said: Same-Sex Couples and Marriage in Newspapers
	Wrapping Up: Summary of the Literature
Chapter 2: Structure of the Study
	Method
	
Chapter 3: Assessment of the Texts and Themes on Marriage Equality
	Findings and Discussions
		Research Questions and Expectations
	Overarching Themes
		Marriage and Religion
		Marriage Only for Heterosexual Couples
		Practical Benefits of Marriage
Comparing Sex, Race, and Sexual Orientation 
Discrimination
		Comparing Marriage Transformations:
		Coverture and Miscegenation
		Resisting Analogies
	Newpaper Coverage During the Trial
		Marriage, Children, and Family
		Marriage, Civil Rights, and Citizenship
		Marriage Equality in the U.S. and Beyond
		Same-Sex Couples are “Like” Heterosexual Couples
	Judicial Records
		Universality of “Traditional” Marriage
		Marriage as Access to Social Vocabulary
	Newpaper Coverage After the Trial
		Marriage as a National Movement
		Marriage and State Regulation
		Comparing Public Opinion on Marriage Equality
		Comparing Political Climate and Events
	Assigning Values and Superlatives in Marriage Discourse
Chapter 4: Final Thoughts
	Conclusions
		Themes During and After the Trial
		Overarching Themes
		Limitations and Further Research
		Implications
Bibliography
Index
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