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46 pages 1 hour read

Kathryn J. Edin, Maria J. Kefalas

Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood Before Marriage

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2005

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Important Quotes

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“For those middle-class women Hewlett spoke to, the tragedy was unintended childlessness following educational and professional success. For the low-income women we spoke to, the tragedy is unintended pregnancy and childbirth before a basic education has been completed, while they are still poor and unmarried.”


(Introduction, Page 2)

Economist Sylvia Ann Hewlett published a monograph in 2002 that argued middle-class, career-driven women were making a mistake in delaying pregnancy and facing infertility. This book became a bestseller highlighting a fertility “crisis.” Edin and Kefalas contrast their work with Hewlett’s book. There is an alternative crisis occurring in poor urban centers: the proliferation of young, unwed mothers trapped in a cycle of poverty.

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“While the poor women we interviewed saw marriage as a luxury, something they aspired to but feared they might never achieve, they judged children to be a necessity, an absolutely essential part of a young woman’s life, the chief source of identity and meaning.”


(Introduction, Page 6)

Low-income communities do not reject marriage, in contrast to what some conservative critics suggest. Instead, low-income women highly value marriage and delay it until they feel economically stable and secure in their relationship. Indeed, they speak of divorce in disparaging terms. Marriage is a privilege they can only hope to achieve while motherhood is a necessity that gives them hope and a meaningful identity.

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“The heady declaration ‘I want to have a baby by you’ is fueled by the extraordinarily high social value the poor place on children.”


(Chapter 1, Page 31)

Young men compliment their girlfriends when they proclaim they want to have a baby with them. This declaration is a high form of praise that assures a young woman of her worthiness in the eyes of her partner and contributes to pregnancies that are not entirely planned but also not avoided.

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