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The Atlantic | The Fight to Be the Most “Pro-family” @TheAtlantic | Uploaded 1 week ago | Updated 1 day ago
The American family continuously evolves. People are marrying later, and having fewer children. Gay people get married. People can publicly swear off marriage altogether without being ostracized. But in politics the attachment to the traditionally nuclear family seems unwavering, and especially this year. 






As Republicans are losing support among women, more candidates are leaning on their wives and daughters to soften their image. So strong is the pressure that one candidate in Virginia (nytimes.com/2024/09/27/us/politics/republican-candidates-wives-ads.html) posed with his friend’s wife and daughters and left the impression he was married. 






Why is there this enduring notion that there is just one version of the “ideal marriage”? 






We talk to Jessica Grose, a New York Times columnist and author of Screaming on the Inside (amazon.com/Screaming-Inside-Unsustainability-American-Motherhood/dp/006307835X) . Grose pinpoints the origin of the American fixation on the nuclear family. And she explains how the candidates’ evoking of this ideal gets in the way of supporting policies that might actually help families 






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The Fight to Be the Most “Pro-family” @TheAtlantic

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