English edit

Etymology edit

Unknown, first used in late 19th century New England, and sometimes connected to The Bostonians (1885) by Henry James, which describes such a relationship.[1]

Noun edit

Boston marriage (plural Boston marriages)

  1. (historical) A long-term monogamous relationship between two unmarried women, especially in New England between the 18th and early 20th centuries.
    • [1894 March 5, “Vanity Fair”, in The Argonaut, page 9:
      Two women, as well known as Susan Channing and Edna D. Cheney, have made separate appeals for this new departure of female habit. A Boston marriage is described to be a sympathetic union of two women who have not been able to make good and agreeable matches with members of the opposite sex.]
    • [1952, John Horne Burns, Cry of the Children:
      [] several times I was within an inch of coming down here and asking you out for a ride in my red convertible, but the Weird Sisters (indicating Meg and Louisa) told me not to disturb you. But I'm big enough to understand; I wasn't born yesterday. I understand this sort of menage, you know; it's called a Boston Marriage.]
    • 2002, Marilyn Yalom, Laura L. Carstensen, Inside the American Couple: New Thinking, New Challenges, University of California Press, page 81:
      Often, in marked contrast to Boston marriages in previous times, these lesbians keep their asexuality hidden from the community.
    • 2006, Laura Castañeda, Shannon B. Campbell, News and Sexuality: Media Portraits of Diversity, SAGE, page 217:
      Thus, unlike in contemporary relationships, participants in a Boston marriage may or may not have considered genital activity to be an important element in their relationship.

References edit

  1. ^ Lillian Faderman (1981) chapter 4, in Surpassing the Love of Men, New York: Quill, →ISBN, page 190:
    The term “Boston marriage” was used in late nineteenth-century New England to describe a long-term monogamous relationship between two otherwise unmarried women. [] Henry James intended his novel The Bostonians (1885) [] to be a study of just such a relationship [] .

Further reading edit