From motivations to accounts: an interpretive analysis of “Living Apart Together” relationships in mid- to late- life

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Date
2016-06
Authors
Funk, Laura
Kobayashi, Karen
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sage
Abstract
LAT (Living Apart Together) relationships involve two people in a long-term, committed intimate relationship who choose to live in separate households. We present findings from one of the first Canadian studies of this phenomenon, also distinct in its use of an interpretive approach to the phenomenon. Fifty-six mid- to late-life participants (28 couples) were interviewed in-person; data were analyzed through the lens of interpretive inquiry. LAT relationships were constructed by participants as protecting personal independence while mitigating relationship risks associated with cohabitation. Participants further justified their arrangements by drawing on ideas about age and/or gender. Though LAT arrangements may help enact the empowering potential of Giddens’ ‘pure relationship,’ they can represent individual-level solutions to broader gendered inequities in cohabiting relationships.
Description
Funk, L.M., & Kobayashi, K. (2016). From motivations to accounts: an interpretive analysis of “Living Apart Together” relationships in mid- to late- life. Journal of Family Issues, 37(8), 1101-1122. doi: 10.1177/0192513X14529432.
Keywords
family relationships, adulthood, living apart together
Citation
Funk, L.M., & Kobayashi, K. (2016). From motivations to accounts: an interpretive analysis of “Living Apart Together” relationships in mid- to late- life. Journal of Family Issues, 37(8), 1101-1122. doi: 10.1177/0192513X14529432.