The longtime New Yorker writer Veronica Geng titled one of her funniest books “Love Trouble Is My Business.” It wasn’t her business alone: over time, love and love trouble, marriage and marital trouble have been at the center of some fascinating pieces in the magazine. In “Fixed,” the scholar and staff writer Jill Lepore chronicles the history, and the complexities, of couples therapy. (“Campaigns to defend, protect, and improve marriage have been around for a long time. They’re usually tangled together.”) In “A Modest Proposal,” David Sedaris recounts the multiple times he proposed to his boyfriend, Hugh, before getting a yes. In “A Couple in Chicago,” Mariana Cooke interviews Barack and Michelle Obama near the beginning of their lives together. In “The Perfect Wife,” Ariel Levy explores how Edith Windsor achieved a groundbreaking victory for same-sex marriage. Finally, in “You’re Getting Married,” from 2003, Rebecca Mead examines the booming bridal industry and how it has reshaped popular ideas about weddings and matrimony. “The average American bride and groom together spend twenty-two thousand dollars on the day that sees them transformed into man and wife,” Mead writes, “and each new union is filled not just with cordial hope but with the promise of profit.”
—David Remnick
From The New Yorker’s Archive
Domestic Affairs
You’re Getting Married
The Wal-Martization of the bridal business.
By Rebecca Mead | April 21 & 28, 2003
Portfolio
A Couple in Chicago
At home with the Obamas, in 1996.
By Mariana Cook | January 19, 2009
Reflections
A Modest Proposal
Just when you thought you’d never get married.
By David Sedaris | September 28, 2015
Newsletters
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Profiles
The Perfect Wife
How Edith Windsor fell in love, got married, and won a landmark case for gay marriage.
By Ariel Levy | September 30, 2013
A Critic at Large
Fixed
The rise of marriage therapy, and other dreams of human betterment.
By Jill Lepore | March 29, 2010
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