This document provides an introduction and translation of Marianne Weber's 1912 work "Authority and Autonomy in Marriage". The introduction discusses Weber as a pioneering feminist sociologist who critiqued the subjugation of women amid modern social transformations. It also outlines the importance of translating and studying her work. The translated text examines the history of marriage, from early patriarchal societies where women were considered men's property, to reforms in ancient Greece, Rome, and Judaism that established legal monogamy but still granted men authority over women.
This document provides an introduction and translation of Marianne Weber's 1912 work "Authority and Autonomy in Marriage". The introduction discusses Weber as a pioneering feminist sociologist who critiqued the subjugation of women amid modern social transformations. It also outlines the importance of translating and studying her work. The translated text examines the history of marriage, from early patriarchal societies where women were considered men's property, to reforms in ancient Greece, Rome, and Judaism that established legal monogamy but still granted men authority over women.
Original Description:
Authority and Autonomy in Marriage by Marriane Weber.
This document provides an introduction and translation of Marianne Weber's 1912 work "Authority and Autonomy in Marriage". The introduction discusses Weber as a pioneering feminist sociologist who critiqued the subjugation of women amid modern social transformations. It also outlines the importance of translating and studying her work. The translated text examines the history of marriage, from early patriarchal societies where women were considered men's property, to reforms in ancient Greece, Rome, and Judaism that established legal monogamy but still granted men authority over women.
This document provides an introduction and translation of Marianne Weber's 1912 work "Authority and Autonomy in Marriage". The introduction discusses Weber as a pioneering feminist sociologist who critiqued the subjugation of women amid modern social transformations. It also outlines the importance of translating and studying her work. The translated text examines the history of marriage, from early patriarchal societies where women were considered men's property, to reforms in ancient Greece, Rome, and Judaism that established legal monogamy but still granted men authority over women.
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www.pdflib.com sales@pdflib.com Authority and Autonomy in Marriage MARIANNE WEBER Translation with Introduction and Commentary CRAIG R. BERMINGHAM INTRODUCTION In ``Authority and Autonomy in Marriage,'' 1 Marianne Weber investigated marriage and the relations between the sexes by first addressing the ideas that have determined the character of those relations through history. In so doing, she studied and evalu- ated two competing normative systems: ``authority'' and ``autonomy.'' Weber exam- ined the dominant normative system, ``authority'' (of the man over the woman), its origins, and its consequences for marriage and the spouses, and advocated its replace- ment by the ``form principle'' of ``autonomy.'' The latter constitutes an ethical stand- ard that arose out of the ideas of Puritanism and the Enlightenment, was thrust upon the modern woman through industrialization, and, if accepted over authority as a legally mandated standard governing marital relations, would lead to greater fulfill- ment on the part of the womanand the manin marriage. In order to place Weber's argument in ``Authority'' in its proper context, three points are worth mentioning. First, as a matter of politics, Weber lobbied for an overhaul of the German legal provisions regarding male authority in the family as a first step in her broader agenda that sought to liberate women from their historically subordinate position. Second, she not only argued for an emancipatory restructuring of the marital institution, but, at the same time, defended the marital ideal, the ``highest and most unquestionable ethical ideal that life has to offer'' (Weber 1907:571), against a contemporary eroticist movement, which she condemned as invidious to the interests of women and to all that is spiritually fulfilling about the relationship between man and woman (Weber 1950:40926). Third, Weber's emphasis on marriage, and on achieving women's autonomy in marriage by way of legal reform, rests on the fundamental assumption that human beings shape one another in interactions, and that the sexual relation, in particular, defines human beings more fundamentally than any other. As she has written elsewhere, ``[N]o human relation is so full of consequences as the sexual relation. Nothing shapes human beings more decisively than their relation in this sphere'' (Weber 1950:410). F 1 In my introduction and commentary, I will refer to Weber's essay either by its full name, ``Authority and Autonomy in Marriage,'' or by the abbreviation, ``Authority.'' Though ``Authority'' is my principle focus, when necessary, I will draw on the author's other works as well. Sociological Theory 21:2 June 2003 # American Sociological Association. 1307 NewYork Avenue NW, Washington, DC20005-4701 The following translation of ``Authority'' and the subsequent commentary are meant to contribute to a study of Marianne Weber's work that is urgently needed for several reasons. First, like many of her contemporaries, Weber was a pioneering sociologist who studied the consequences of modernity. However, as a feminist, she was particularly interested in examining and critiquing women's subjugation amidst the wrenching social transformations of the time. Second, Weber published nine books of social analysis during her life, including Wife and Mother in the Development of Law (1907), which established her as the ``acknowledged authority on women's position in society, as well as an authority on family law and its development'' (Britton 1979:31), and Women's Questions and Women's Thoughts (1919), in which ``Authority'' was first published. Additionally, her biography of Max Weber, and the 10 volumes of his work edited and proofed by her within the first two years after his death, not only preserved Max's thought for posterity but offer considerable insight into her own life and scholarship as well. Third, during her life, Weber was a well-known public figure in Germany who was the first woman elected to a German parliament, was a member of the Bavarian Assembly, was elected as the only female representative to the Baden State Constitutional Convention of 1919, and was an executive committee member of a political party that became part of the governing coalition in the early Weimar Republic. Finally, Weber interacted with several of sociology's ``canonized'' male founders, such as Georg Simmel, Robert Michels, and her husband Max. She directed a feminist critique at their work and thought while they were still alive, and in the process of formulating the very ideas for which they are remembered today. For all of these reasons Weber's thought deserves scholarly attention. AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE (1912) 2 Whoever wants to fundamentally understand and correctly judge the inner structure of marriage and the relation between the sexes must at least cast a short glance at the history of its development, above all at the leading ideas through which it has been defined. As far as can be determined, at the beginning of all history the woman was the property of the man among all of the civilized peoples of Europe. Through purchase or exchange, he gained unlimited right of ownership over her and her children. For this reason, he could freely dispose of her person, e.g., at any time sell her, expel her, or take up with her competitors, while she remained, with respect to him, completely without rights, permanently bound, and obligated to loyalty and obedience. As such, initially, the only formal shaping principle regarding the relation between man and woman is simply the right of the stronger: primitive patriarchalism. It still exists today among diverse uncivilized peoples as an unquestioned legal form. The community between man and woman can only then be characterized as marriage in an actual sense when the absolute power of the man finds its limits through certain obligations toward the woman. Universally, this occurs first when the woman's family ceases to turn her over unconditionally to the power of the man, above all not without equipping her with a dowry, which elevates the woman as ``wife'' to a position above concubines. Her family thus earns for her an entitlement accord- ing to which her children must be considered the man's ``legitimate heirs'' over all of 2 With regard to the footnotes appearing in the translation of Weber's essay, the original author's footnotes appear in roman text. My explanatory footnotes appear in italics. Additionally, all italics and quotation marks within the text itself appeared in Weber's original essay. 86 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY his other children. In this way, the oldest, conscious structuring of sexual relations was created everywhere out of the natural relation of power: the so-called legitimate marriage as an insurance of certain women and their children against the polygamous drives of the husband. Otherwise, initially, marriage completely maintained the char- acter of a relation of ownership. 3 From that time onward, every great cultural age has formed and built on this original structure, and everywhere, namely, in the same fundamental direction. Wher- ever civilization grew, the aspiration grew as well to somehow protect the woman from the barbaric arbitrariness of the husband. On the other hand, everywhere, his domination over her and the children nevertheless remained secure. The husband was directed toward humane patriarchy, toward a milder domination of the wife, but not toward the recognition of her as a companion. The creation of monogamous marriage as an institute of law was the work of the Greeks and Romans. This means that they created legal monogamous marriage, which did, of course, forbid the husband from taking several wives into the home, and only allowed him to gain legitimate children from one wife. However, it hindered him neither legally nor morally from possessing as many other women as he liked outside the home without any obligation. Also at that time, the commandment of marital fidelity was imposed, under threat of severe punishment, only on the woman. She alone was the one who had to answer for the realization of a social and ethical ideal which Antiquity already revered and recognized, but yet without making the attempt to force the sexually ``needier'' nature of the man under its sway. In contrast to the Greeks and Romans, old Judaism still permitted polygamy. Only it surrounded marriage for the first time with a religious consecration of nothing less than world-historical significance. Marriage was revealed to the prophets of the covenant as God's oldest institution and order. God Himself had, accordingly, blessed the first couple. But God Himself had also determined the relations of the partners. He created for the husband a ``helper,'' and imposed on her the Word: ``Your will shall be subordinate to your husband and he shall be your master.'' 4 Thus, not only was marriage thereby made holy, but marriage in a special form. This sanctioning of patriarchalism had the furthest-reaching consequences. It has determined the structure of Christian marriage up until our times. For the lofty Christian teachings of religious equality of the woman were already distorted by the greatest apostle when it came to her relation to her spouse. The bearer of Christian propaganda, Paul, who sought, in all other areas of life, to break out of Jewish tradition, remained entirely within its limits regarding the woman. Referring to the authority of ``the law,'' he sealed not only the woman's obligation of obedience, but also her total position with respect to the man, as a being of second order: ``[F]or the man is not from the woman, but the woman from the man. And the man is not created for the good of the woman, but rather the woman is created for the good of the man.'' 5 This position has been reified into dogma up until the present in all of those circles that believe in ``definitive revelations,'' but has asserted its power beyond these circles as well. But in another direction, Christianity created a large, new cultural product: the deepening of the demand of ``legalized'' monogamy into an indispensable religious-cultural imperative, that now was not only directed toward the woman, but rather, for the first time in history, emphatically toward the man as well. 3 For the historical basis for this account, compare Marianne Weber, ``Wife and Mother in the Development of Law,'' Tu bingen, 1907. 4 See Genesis 2:1825 and Ephesians 5:2224. 5 See 1 Corinthians 11:89. AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 87 Though the fulfillment of this ideal has yet only been realized by a small part of humanity, the mere fact that this was set as a goal to be strived for had to influence the relation between man and woman most definitively. Only then, when the man was also directed toward unification with one woman, could marriage become the vessel for all of his spiritual strength. Only then was the soil made fertile, in which, out of the natural element of fleeting sexual love, the most tender and deepest spiritual relation between man and woman could grow, a relation of which it would not be senseless to demand that it be everlasting. However, the completeness of the Christian marital ideal would soon suffer losses through the teachings of the Church. As a reaction against the sexual excesses of the cultural world of late antiquity, these teachings exaggerated the ideal of controlling one's sex life to the point of despising all that is natural, and called for its furthest suppression possible. The natural foundation of the community between man and woman was, from then on, banished to the domain of sin. It was still permissible in marriage, but even there, it was not worthy of any holy consecration. Life without marriage was considered the more complete state of affairs. Eve, the type of earthly woman oriented toward the flesh, the mother of sin, the temptress to evil, was juxtaposed to the Virgin Mary as the embodiment of undefiled motherliness. Protestantism did raise marriage, as a work of God, above celibacy, as the work of humans; but it also allowed sexual love only under the blemish of ``evil desire,'' which originates not from God, but from the devil. In the case of such desire God merely ``looks through the fingers'' in marriage because, as Luther says, there it is compen- sated by many kinds of listlessness and torment. 6 New arguments in the Bible were sought for the subordination of the woman. Thus, Luther cites Eve's Fall from Grace very emphatically as its historical source: ``If Eve hadn't sinned, she would have reigned together with Adam and ruled as his helper.'' 7 But now the Regime belongs to him alone, and she must bow before him as before her master. But, on the other hand, the spirit of Protestantism also contributed to the deepening of the marital ideal, and the shaping of everyday marital life. Namely, through those currents outside of the official churches of the Reformation that are classified as Puritan. Of course, Puritanism made a detour that is not easily recognizable. It, namely, carried into the world and into the institution of marriage with inexorable strictness the ascetic ideals of monasticism: rejection of all life pleasures and suppression of sensuality. Luther's God had still, just like the Catholic God, in magnanimous generosity turned a blind eye toward marital sensuality. The God of the Puritans allowed marital sensuality only for the purpose of the procreation of children for the greater glory of God. However much we like, today, to sharply reject this demonization and rationaliza- tion of elementary vitality, one should not forget that precisely that Puritan breeding, which for long periods of time attained a never-before-achieved disciplining of the man, should be credited with a deepening of the spiritual and ethical relation between man and woman that since then has never been lost. Only then, when subjugation of the elementary was taken seriously, could the focus become the spiritual 8 melting together of the partners, the intimacy of their spiritual relationship as the most important meaning of marriage. 6 For further reading of passages in Martin Luther's writing that reflect this sentiment, see Luther's Works (1961 1: 116; 3:4748; 25:320321; 45:3536; 51:154.) 7 For this passage in Martin Luther's writing, see Luther's Works (1961 1:203.) 8 ``seelische'': This German word comes from die Seele (the soul). Here, Marianne is referring to the ``melting together of the partners' souls.'' 88 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY That which marriage was capable of becoming in these circles was expressed in the religious-colored language of the time, most beautifully in a farewell letter written by the Quaker W. Penn to his wife as he departed his homeland in order to found a new state on the other side of the ocean: ``Don't forget that you were the love of my youth and the chief joy of my life, the most beloved and worthiest of my earthly solace. The reason for that love existed more in your inner than in your outer virtues, though the latter are many. God knows it, you know it, and I too can say it, that our connection was a work of Providence, and God's likeness in each of us was that which attracted us to one another the most.'' What kind of a world lies between this understanding of the relation between the sexes and that which reveals itself in a Greek thinker's well- known remark: ``We have hetaera to amuse ourselves with, after that purchased hussies to care for our bodies, and finally wives who should give us legal children, and whose duty it is to watch over all of the matters of our house.'' 9 Within the religious communities of the new world that were governed by the Puritan spirit, the thought of religious equality of the woman was taken seriously for the first time. For the Quakers, the teachings in the Bible did not represent the definitive and only possible revelation, but rather one of many forms in which the ``inner light'' appears to human beings. They could, for that reason, drop the dogma concerning the subordination of the woman as God's desire. ``Obey God more than human beings''; this sentence, which establishes freedom of conscience on the part of the individual as an inalienable right against every earthly authority, was recognized among these communities for the first time also in the case of the wife with respect to the husband. Freedom of conscience, the mother of all civil rights of the individual, stood across the ocean at the cradle of women's rights as well. Fundamental subjugation under traditional and trusted authoritiesfundamental subjugation only under one's own consciencefrom then on, those are the two forms of human action that arise equally out of religious feeling, and between which there is only an ``either-or.'' The eighteenth century directed at worldly things the idea that every human beingprecisely because he is a human beingis entitled to certain inalienable rights vis-a -vis all others and every earthly authority: 10 against the state in the form of a demand for political participation and legal equality of its citizens, against the social community in the form of a moral demand on the part of the individual for a certain sphere of inner and outer freedom. These ideas achieved their deepest significance and their highest clarity in the ethical teachings of freedom of German idealism, through our great thinkers Kant and Fichte. That which in this context is of interest may be formulated in a few sentences: The human being is, as a bearer of reason, intended to govern himselfthat is, to act not, for example, according to the arbitrariness of his instincts, but rather, in accordance with a conscience that has been subordinated to the moral law. As a bearer of this capacity for ``autonomy,'' the individual possesses its specific dignity, which distin- guishes it as a ``personality'' before all other beings; it may, for that reason, raise the claim to be ``an end in itself.'' Out of these ideas arises the simple and undeniable principle for the shaping of human relationships: every person should respect in every 9 Hetaera refers to a highly cultured courtesan or concubine, especially in ancient Greece. 10 In this translation, I have chosen to employ the masculine pronoun form because Marianne used that form in the original German. Marianne's use of the German masculine pronoun er was not a consciously gendered choice, but rather a matter of grammatical necessity. In German, the pronoun employed must be masculine because, grammatically, it must agree with the gender of the word for human being, der Mensch, which is also masculine. AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 89 other human being the predestination of that person to be an end in himself. No person should consider his fellow human beings merely as a means for his personal ends. There is, in reality, hardly a human relationship thinkable that, if it desires to be ethically adequate, can get around this maxim. And the path from the acceptance of this sentence to a new structuring of the relation between the sexes seems to be a short one. For according to it, the highest ethical goal of existence, for the woman as well, can be nothing other than the development into a morally autonomous personality. Accordingly, it is just as immoral for her, too, to bend to a foreign will against her own conscience. Accordingly, she, too, may not be used as a mere means to the husband's ends. But again, alone in the case of the woman, these ideals were distorted. The tradition that conceded to the man's natural instincts for power remained powerful with regard to her. Even the great heralds of autonomy did not even think about laying a hand on the patriarchal system. Instead, they tried, through a clever chess move of reason, to bring her fundamental subordination into agreement with the new ideals. Husband and wife are declared to be ``originally equals,'' and marriage a contract through which the wife voluntarily subordinates herself to the husband. In Kant's view, it is not, for example, contrary to the equality of the spouses, if the law says of the husband with reference to the wife: And he should be your master. And Fichte's dialectic was even able to infer, out of his teachings on freedom, a patriarchal marital ideal, which did, of course, include a complete right to divorce on the part of the woman. But that which was denied the woman in the realm of the idea was soon forced upon her in the realm of realities. The new life forces of the Machine Age blew open the circle of her family duties, led her away from the protection of the house, and thereby out of the husband's sphere of domination. The increasing reduction of household work under the pressure of technical and economic forces compels a constantly increasing percentage of women to either temporarily or permanently stand on their own feet outside the home. But the intellectual ring that had closed around her due to the restriction of her activities and influence to the house was also thereby blown open. Today, she sees herself woven into a world of superpersonal contexts that demand that she prove herself in new ways. She sees herself placed before an array of new forms of influence and life problems, between which no one other than she can rationally choose. This intellectual departure from the house, just like the economic departure, must fundamentally shift her position within our social community and her relation to the other sex. We are, indeed, experiencing also in our time, like in no time before, a thorough readjustment of the customs and views regarding the woman, and an expansion of the opportunities for life and development that are conceded to her. In many areas of life, she has achieved the legal status to speak for herself; in other areas, she is still denied that status. And above all, for marriage, in which man and woman are most closely and directly connected to one another, the legally protected predominance of the husband is still an indispensable form-principle. We find, of course, a growing number of men, above all from the leading intellectual strata, who are ready to value their own wife as a personality and to do without the use of gender privilege with regard to her. However, only very few today agree to the fundamental renunciation of the rights of authority with regard to the entire female sex. An unmistakable document of this fact is the legal form of modern marriage, which the German representatives of the people bestowed upon us just in time for the turn of the century. It is true that the German Civil Code fundamentally recognizes women's juridical competency, and makes them, just like men, fully responsible in business and 90 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY transactions. But the housewife's competency is limited wherever it could threaten the husband's dominance in the household. Thus, our marital law is a strangely garnished construct, which bears all the stylelessness of a compromise between irreconcilable principles. For example, the robust, ungarnished obedience-article that is familiar to all older statutory regimes is disguised in a politely appearing husband's decision-making authority, which nevertheless inadequately hides its unaltered fundamental character. For the decision-making authority is valid not only in the husband's special sphere of duties, but rather in all those matters that concern the family's collective life, i.e., also in the housewife and mother's special sphere of duties. Furthermore, marital law today indeed provides for ``parental authority'' rather than the paternal authority of earlier times, but the mother's parental authority attains its full scope of application only after the father's death, or when he is hindered from exercising that authority. Next to the father, the mother's parental authority is only a fragment. She can neither represent the children in court and in legal transactions, nor manage and administer their property. Minor children need only the father's consent to enter into marriage. And above all, the wife is again expressly subordinate to the husband within the most important sphere of parental duty: the welfare of the children's person, which is vested in the mother as well as the father, and their care and rearing, which includes a determination of their living arrangements. In the case of differences of opinion, the father decides. That is, he can determine for the boys and girls which school they attend, which vocation they take up, and where they should be reared. In addition to this personal subordination, this legislative regime also provides for the wife's pecuniary dependence. This has perhaps less fundamental significance, but in everyday marital life, it is of all the more practical importance. Of course, the new economic conditions of life, into which our age has placed the woman, have also wrested an important innovation from German legal thinking: the wife's independent earnings from work remain at her disposal as her savings, while in earlier times she had to hand them over to her husband. The working woman has thus become, up to a certain point, economically inde- pendent. This is not the case, however, for the woman with her own property assets insofar as she does not protect herself before marriage through a special marital contract. For the legal regime places all of the assets that she brings into the marriage in the hands of her husband. This is done explicitly in order to secure, as the comments to the German civil code acknowledge, the husband's position as ``master of the household and head of the marriage.'' And, above all, there is a mass of women who are not secure, including those who are without property, and who have to do without independent earnings for the good of their career as housewives and mothers. Still today, these women, even if one only views it economically, make irreplaceable contributions to the family through their domestic work, and perhaps also through their assistance in their husbands' careers. To be sure, all of these women have a legal claim to support by their husbands that is appropriate to their social standing. But this very elastic formulation provides them with not a penny for their free disposal, and secures for them not even a modest independence for the satisfaction of their personal needs. For both the woman with property and the woman without, it is at the pleasure and discretion of the husband whether she will be able to freely dispose of some amount of money. The modern women who strive for personality rights in the deepest sense for their sex, responsibility and self-reliance, protest against these carryovers from the patriarchal system. Precisely because the woman, by force of her familial functions AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 91 through marriage, is normally much more strongly bound than the husband in every sense, physically and economically, the lawmaker should, first and foremost, make her protection a priority. For that reason, they juxtapose the principle of the authority of the husband with the idea of companionship of the partners as a form principle in marriage, and propose: 1. Elimination of the husband's general, legal decision-making authority. 2. A different distribution of parental rights, such that in the event of unsolvable differences of opinion, the husband decides for the sons, and the wife decides for the daughters. 3. They work to achieve, for the women of all strata, a sphere of pecuniary independence secured through a more exact definition of the support obliga- tions of the husband. Here is not the place to further expound upon these legal questions. As such, we return to the fundamental ethical question: whether authority or autonomy should shape spouses' relations. How, then, does marriage look when, in accordance with its legal form, the fundamental authority of the husband really governs the relationships of the partners? Then there is no doubt that the family and the house are the husband's sphere of domination. Then in the sphere of influence that has been ascribed to the woman from time immemorial as her native, innate domain, she stands as housewife and mother constantly under the tutelage of the husband. And in all matters in which she should normally be considered the more competent, she has, at most, an advisory, but not a deciding, voice. For that reason, in the case of differences of opinion between the partners, an external unity of will is effortlessly createdand the authoritarian principle is still justified today by this highly external aim. But is it worth the sacrifices that it costs? It is clear that the constant bending of the wife's will without her inner consent and conviction can either be a mere feigned submission on her part, from which she, in turn, underhandedly frees herself behind her husband's back, or it actually achieves a suppression of her ability to reasonthat is, the atrophy of her entire intellectual and spiritual development. Whoever has once learned the satisfac- tion of acting conscientiously according to one's own determination will know how the inner development of those women is restricted whose wants and aspirations are never given free reign under the pressure of authority. The influence of the patriarchal system can certainly not stop at matters that affect only the life of the family community, as its modern proponents purport. There is no question that it also extends itself all of the way into the sphere of the woman's entirely personal life. For marital relationships encompass the entire person, and that which one spouse does and feels, touches necessarily at some point the life of the other. The male spouse who is patriarchally disposed will without question also want to dictate and control the inner life of the woman. The richer and more independent the content of her personality comes to be, the more difficult her fundamental subordination must of course become. For this reason, strong aspirations toward self-reliance and intellectual develop- ment necessarily fill a husband who is bent on authority with a severe uneasiness. He will not rest if he is not constantly secure also in his position as the master of her most personal inner life. He will feel the need to monitor her readings, her friendships, her interests outside the home. This half-unconscious tendency, which is, in many cases, merely suggested by tradition, also continues to make countless husbands today 92 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY suspicious of every serious ambition on the part of women to be active beyond the limits of the house. And that is entirely understandable. For outside the home they are, just like men, placed in superpersonal contexts and structures that remove them from personal domination. The inner protest of the patriarchally disposed husband, who lacks the full, naive freedom from restraint of earlier times, is normally dressed up as a concern that the woman is neglecting her family life and her childrena plea that rarely fails to achieve its effect on conscientious, sensitive women. From time immemorial up until the present day, a part of the energy and intellectual vitality of the womaneven of her moral qualities: forthrightness and courage in her own opinionhave very certainly been sacrificed to her rearing for patriarchal marriage, and to that marriage itself. Has it not been made through all the centuries into a religious obligation, and a precondition for her happiness, that she learn submission in silent obedience? And certainly the feelings of happiness of many women have been less impaired through this process than their inner development. This can only change when husbands learn to do without the fundamental privileges of authority. But does the ethical autonomy of the woman forbid any subordination of her will whatsoever to that of the husband? Very certainly not. Voluntary subordination, devotion, which is offered as a free gift of love, is something different than compelled subordination. The personality that is responsible for its own actions does not then end up in a contradiction with itself if it bends before another personality's higher insight, more mature judgment, and greater completeness due to its own inner con- victions, if it sacrifices for the higher aspirations of a greater person. On the basis of such convictions, the autonomous woman can of course also make her husband's will her own, and place her wishes and interests behind his. But when that can occur may only be decided before the forum of her own conscience, and only from case to case. It may absolutely not be decided for all time at the very beginning of their relationship, as the principle of authority would require. In any case, where the wife knows that the husband is caught in a mistakeand the husband also ``errs, as long as he continues to try''and where, for that reason, she cannot freely agree with him, then in the spirit of autonomy, her own inner voice must decide. Then she must, to express it religiously, claim the right: to obey God more than human beings. Only the free sacrifices of love for the aspirations of a greater person possess beauty and dignity. A husband's offer of these to the wife is also no disgrace. But if, instead of such free giving of one's self, the woman obliges his needs and everyday goals against her inner voice, simply because it is comfortable, for the sake of outward peace, or to please her husband, then she commits blasphemy against her own human dignity; then she devalues herself to a second-class being. And the consequences of such a relation between the partners turn back on the husband as well. The wife who is subordinated remains ``subordinated'' in the totality of her being: almost a child, naive to the world, intellectually contented, enclosed in the circle of the household, fixed in her interests on the purely personal and trifling. And this is the tragic irony of her fate: this woman who, in order to comply with her husband's wishes, did not fully develop her powers of moral judgment and her intellectual abilities is normally left mentally and spiritually far behind in the course of the years by the aspiring, alert husband. She cares for him in their everyday life, but she has absolutely no problems, no complementing ideas or impulses, no intellectual stimu- lations to offer him. The relationship to her requires absolutely no effort from his side. Thus, we often experience then that the much-extolled German model-housewife always remains valuable to the husband as the mother of his children and the source AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 93 of his comfort, but that he would rarely think of sharing his higher intellectual life with her. He even often prefers to seek the normal rest and relaxation alone, for everyday life's thick dust of boredom covers the relationships and turns to gray that which was once colorful and shining. And then when, with increasing desire for comfort, real chivalry fades out of everyday marital life, a state of affairs often developseven in those strata where, according to their position in life and talents, it would definitely not be necessaryabout which Nietzsche spoke: ``Ah, this poverty of a soul in twos, ah, this filth of a soul in twos, ah, this pitiful comfort in twos! They call all of this marriage, and they say their marriages were made in heaven.'' 11 Or the other possibility: Time and destiny mature the woman in spite of her authoritarian boundedness. Then one day her aspirations and reason will break through their bounds. But then it is very difficult, with respect to a husband who had been used to her subordination up to that point, to find courage in her own opinion, and to thereby upset the marital equilibrium. How often have even noble and brave women been able to find no other way out of the conflict between the dictates of one's own conscience and the dictates of one's husband than to pretend to submit themselves to him, but to secretly circumvent such submission. The individual life of the woman that for so long remained latent confronts the husband as a strange, hostile element that disturbs the marital happiness. The unconditional trust vanishes, the marital life then splits in an often-irreparable breach, and all of this just because the wife first found herself so late, and because the husband did not learn to value the being at his side as ``destined for self-determination'' just as he is. Modern women value marriage as it should bethat is, a life's partnership that is founded on the affinity of souls and senses, and on the desire for full responsibility, as the highest ideal of human community that stands as an unshakable guiding star above the sexual life of civilized humanity. They are, like the women of all times, prepared to make those sacrifices that, as family members, marriage now demands of them as a matter of necessity. These sacrifices are perhaps more difficult to make for many today than in earlier times because our time is the first to know the conflict between marriage and career, and between the special family tasks of the woman and her inner drive to contribute to the construction of the superpersonal cultural world. Modern women alone would now like to be declared of age, and to be respected by the husband as a companion for life who, like him, stands before the face of eternity responsible for her actions, and who, like him, must autonomously prove herself in the world. They demand the trust that the female sex can learn to keep the balance between natural and self-selected tasks just as well as the male sex between its various obligations and interests. And they are convinced that only where this occurs can marriage be more than an institution of social expediency. It is no small task to keep the marital partnership free from the suffocating ash of everyday life and habit through all of the phases of a long life, from the time of youthful passion that allows no room for anything else, through the prime of life, where, along with love, an abundance of other powers struggle to rule the soul, up until the time when days grow few. More dangerous than all the suffering and strife that destiny imposes from without, more fearful than the problems that arise out of the struggle of souls, is the endless chain of satisfied, comfortable, struggleless every- days, in which the partners have one another effortlessly in possession. Only when, in 11 For the context of this quote in the original German, see Nietzsche's ``Also sprach Zarathustra; Ein Buch fur Alle und Keinen'' in Nietzsche's Werke in Drei Ba nden (1994:15657). For this quote in a readable English translation, see Nietzche (1966:70). 94 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY both husband and wife, the content of their souls, the riches of their inner beings, remain in constant growth, can the holy flame of tender and deep sensitivity con- tinuously find new nourishment. Only then can the hours return again and again, in which, between all earthly things, the treasure of love illuminates as a certainty of the everlasting in the human soul. But a part of this, above all, is that the wife, too, remains one who is reaching and becoming, so that she can forever give to her husband from her own self-earned, inner treasures. TRANSLATOR'S COMMENTARY Weber's Objective and Methodology Marianne Weber's chief objectives, and a number of important aspects of her meth- odology, are revealed through the opening sentence of her essay. In ``Authority,'' Weber attempted to ``fundamentally understand'' marriage through an essentially historical, conceptual approach. Like her neo-Kantian teacher, Heinrich Rickert, Weber believed that unique historical events may only be understood, and made relevant to our understanding of the present, by clearly formulating historical con- cepts that illuminate distinctions between unique historical phenomena (see Rickert 1902). In this regard, for example, Weber began her study by proposing several ``ideal typical'' constructs, or, to use Rickert's language, ``historical individuals'': ``primitive patriarchalism,'' ``legitimate marriage,'' and ``humane patriarchy.'' Arguably, she also employed ``autonomy of the partners'' as an ``ideal type'' to understand the present reality of marriage. Ultimately, however, Weber advocated her concept of autonomy, and used it to critique male authority. As such, in contrast to Rickert, her historical constructs represent more than merely ``ideas'' built to aid logical analysis and an interpretive understanding of the social world. For her, they are also ``ideals'' in the normative, prescriptive sense of the word. Her second aimto ``correctly judge'' marriage and sexual relationsshould be understood in this context. Weber made clear value judgments regarding patriarchal domination through history. Not only is this true in the context of this essay, but it is also characteristic of her methodology in general. For, as she informs us elsewhere: [T]he social science academic, whose findings are, in great measure, usable for the shaping of life, and who, for that reason, is responsible for the course of politics, has a double task: the advancement of truth for its own sake, and the orientation of his actions on clear, consciously chosen convictions. (Weber 1950:361) Apart from the importance of normatively prescriptive historical concepts in her analysis, Weber's call for an examination ``above all'' of the ``leading ideas'' that have ``defined'' marriage (the first half of ``Authority'' is devoted to this subject), emphasizing the role of ideas in history. These ideasor ``form principles,'' as she called them amount to sanctioned standards of conduct that defined marriage by constraining individual action. Thus, while Weber maintained that sexual relations shape human beings more than any other, this level of social life is dependent upon a more structural inquiry into the institutionally sanctioned norms that define marriage in the first place. Additionally, while Weber understood the defining historical role of ideas, she also observed that, through history, a larger structure of oppressionpatriarchyhad permeated the institutions in which ideas are formed and enforced, and manipulated AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 95 them as an instrument of domination. Weber's consideration of the law, religion, and the Enlightenment should be seen in this context. Yet the author also recognized that the patriarchal system does not merely produce an ideology that perpetuates oppres- sion. In contrast, Weber asserted that many potentially liberating ideas arose out of institutions, seemingly independent of patriarchal domination, but that those ideas were also distorted by men in power within institutions who were not willing to consistently apply them to women as well. For instance, Christianity and the Enlight- enment produced liberating ideas that could have had immense impact on women's social status. However, St. Paul and the great Enlightenment thinkers, respectively, ``reconstructed'' those ideas to reconcile them with the precepts of patriarchy. Areas of Substantive Focus in ``Authority and Autonomy in Marriage'' Weber's examination of the Protestant ethic. In a discussion that reveals fascinating parallels to her husband's work, Weber examined the moral standards of conduct advanced by Christianity, particularly the ``spirit of Protestantism,'' their profound influence on the behavior of married partners, and their consequent influence on the character of marriage as an institution. As an important early step in this process, the author considered the efforts of medieval Catholicism to harness the powerful energy of religion as a shaping force in the sexual lives of men and women. Catholicism began the enforcement of monogamy as a moral ideal that, for the first time, applied to both men and women, and placed great emphasis on the suppression of individuals' sex lives. Luther's Reformation and especially the ideas of Puritanismcontinued this process by releasing the power- ful religious forces of the monasteries into everyday life, and thereby transformed actors' sexual activities into religiously meaningful and highly ``disciplined'' tasks. This morally mandated, strict control of sexual drives fundamentally transformed marriage by removing sex as its basis and founding it instead upon spiritual, ethical values: mutual responsibility and dedication; honesty and respect between partners, rather than the pursuit of selfish goals at the expense of the other; orientation on the future of the relationship through emotional and intellectual investment; and unwa- vering fidelity. Additionally, Weber noted that these same standards continue to define the character of marriage, though Puritanism no longer provides the religious meaning and sanction for them. Apart from the establishment of a deeper spiritual and romantic bond between the partners, Weber also attributed to the ``Puritan spirit'' the development of ``freedom of conscience'' as a moral standard that mandated action according to one's conscience, rather than on the basis of blind and thoughtless obedience to earthly authorities. This moral standard not only stood at the fore of women's rights in general, but, in particular, changed the character of marriage by explicitly freeing the woman, for the first time in history, from the husband's authority. In her discussion of Protestantism, Weber revealed several additional themes that are worth noting at this juncture: First, in discussing the influence of Puritan moral standards on the character of marriage, her observations suggest a clear dialectical tension in her thought. For example, though Western religion has promoted values that have relegated women throughout history to second-class status, it has also given rise to the ideals of liberation that would free women from that status. While religion sanctioned the subordinate role of the woman, it also enforced monogamy in the case of the man as well. Though the ``spirit of Protestantism'' promoted the abhorrence of all natural sexual pleasure in marriage, the disciplining of the man and the elevated 96 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY importance of marriage facilitated a romantic, spiritual, and intellectual union between the partners such as had never before been seen, and which has never since been lost. In short, though her feminist critique of Christianity is powerful and effective, Weber's discussion also suggests that she by no means rejected that tradition in its entirety. On the contrary, the oppressive and emancipatory ideas arising out of that tradition exist in dialectical tension to one another. Second, Weber introduced several themes that are of critical importance in order to make her argument polemically appealing to the reader, and as a matter of theoretical analysis. On the one hand, she emphasizedoften in poetic and romantic prosethe importance for human beings of the ``tender and deep spiritual and intellectual relation'' between man and woman, and contrasted this ``marital ideal'' with ``fleeting sexual love.'' On the other hand, though intimate sexuality as the natural foundation of the ``community'' between wife and husband had been damaged by the Christian banishment of sex to the domain of sin, this historical ``disciplining'' of the man's sexual drives allowed marriage to become ``a vessel of spiritual strength'' for him as well. Regarding the polemical appeal of her argument, both themes are quite significant. On the one hand, they serve to draw a clear line against eroticism and to lay bare the emotional, spiritual, and intellectual emptiness of sexual activity without moral commitment. On the other hand, it is important for Weber's legislative agenda to show that men also have a great deal to gain from her alternative marital form principle. Concerning Weber's theoretical analysis, these two themes are quite significant, because they offer insight into her sociological understanding of the relation between several levels of social life: institutionally mandated ideas (the moral standards of Puritanism) shape individuals' conduct (by motivating them to strive for moral perfection, to view sex as merely a means for the procreation of children to the greater glory of God, and to live monogamous, less sexually oriented lives). Individuals' conduct (e.g., the ``disciplined'' man), in turn, reshapes the form of their relationships (making them more tender, intimate, and spiritually based), and that form also reflexively affects individuals' lives (giving them a source of great strength, joy, and energy). This theoretical understanding of social life, revealed through her passages on the significance of Puritanism for the institution of marriage, is characteristic of Weber's thought throughout ``Authority'' and in general. Weber's employment of Kantian ethics. According to Weber, up until the development of the ``Puritan spirit,'' marriage had been governed, to varying degrees, by the ``form principle'' of ``authority''that is, the structurally mandated inequality of power between the sexes that subordinated the woman to the man's will. At the conclusion of her examination of Puritanism, however, the author noted a new development: since that time, two dialectical ideas, both of which arose out of the Christian tradition, have competed in their influence on human behavior: ``fundamental sub- jugation under traditional and trusted authorities'' and ``fundamental subjugation only under one's own conscience.'' With this observation, Weber began an investigation into the ethical teachings of freedom of German idealism, in which the latter of these two competing ideas ``achieved [its] deepest significance and [its] highest clarity.'' Although the author seems to present her subsequent discussion of Enlightenment ethics merely as an examination of further historical ideas that influenced the character of marriage, in fact, her employment of Kantian ideas in the service of feminist inquiry is fundamen- tally significant for her argument in ``Authority'' and for her work in general. AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 97 Like many members of her intellectual circle, Weber made Kant's thought a pillar of her ideas. It is important to note that she employed the Kantian concept of ``autonomy'' in three ways. First, she derived her ideal-typical, moral-evaluative concept of autonomy directly from Kantian ethics, and she returned to this concept throughout her work in order to critique patriarchy. Second, she proposed autonomy as a structural form principle for marriage, one that should inform future legislation regarding the family, and one that, if implemented through law, would restructure the sexual relation between man and woman and make it more rewarding and satisfying than any fashionable eroticist alternative. Finally, she understood autonomy in the strict Kantian sensethat is, as an individualistic moral ideal of conduct according to which all individuals, but particularly women, become reasoning, morally responsible agents, and only through which may they achieve the full measure of their humanity. Weber introduced the Kantian concept of autonomy by asserting that ``[t]he human being is, as a bearer of reason, intended to govern himselfthat is, to act not, for example, according to the arbitrariness of his instincts, but rather, in accordance with a conscience that has been subordinated to the moral law.'' 12 The ``moral law'' to which she referred in this passage is Kant's categorical imperative. 13 In this context, autonomy should be understood as distinct from the Kantian concept of ``hetero- nomy,'' which refers to the foreign determination of one's will, be it by any earthly authority, an ``unreasoned'' passion or instinct, orfor that matterGod. Weber then continued her argument by explaining that ``[a]s a bearer of this capacity for `autonomy,' the individual possesses its specific dignity which distin- guishes it as a `personality' before all other beings; it may, for that reason, raise the claim to be `an end in itself.''' It is important to note that Kantian ethics went so far as to cite the human capacity for autonomy as the distinguishing factor between human beings and all other animals. Further, only because of their reason, Kant argued, may human beings be considered ``ends in themselves.'' By employing this Kantian line of argument, Weber suggested that the principle of authority has deprived women of their very humanity through the ages, and only through autonomy can they become fully human. The author completed the foundation of her Kantian critique of patriarchy by asserting the ``simple and undeniable principle for the shaping of human relations'' that ``every person should respect in every other human being the predestination of that person to be an end in himself. No person should consider his fellow human beings merely as a means for his personal ends.'' Note that, while Kant put forth this maxim to guide autonomous individual human action alone, Weber employed the ``ends principle,'' which is one formulation of the categorical imperative, 14 explicitly as a structural ``principle for the shaping of human relations.'' As such, the author transformed a bourgeois, individualistic, and atomizing ethical principle into a struc- tural precept that should define all human interactions. Ultimately, Weber utilized the ``ends principle'' to direct a potent ethical critique at patriarchy by explaining that 12 For two formulations of Kant's principle of autonomy, see Kant (1972): ``Always act so that you can regard your own will as making universal law'' (Kant 1972:434) and ``Accordingly, every being of reason must act as if, through his maxims, he were at every moment a member of the universal kingdom of ends who is making universal rules'' (Kant 1972:438). 13 For a formulation of Kant's categorical imperative, compare Kant: ``Always act so that you can will the rule of your action to be a universal law'' (Kant 1972:421). Kant delivered five formulations of his categorical imperative, one of which Marianne uses to make her feminist argument. 14 For Kant's formulation of the ``ends principle,'' see Kant (1972:429): ``Always treat others, and yourself, as an end, and never as a mere means.'' 98 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY the path from the acceptance of this sentence to a new structuring of the relation between the sexes seems to be a short one. For according to it, the highest ethical goal of existence, for the woman as well, can be nothing other than the develop- ment into a morally autonomous personality. Accordingly, it is just as immoral for her, too, to bend to a foreign will against her own conscience. Accordingly, she, too, may not be used as a mere means to the husband's ends. Thus, Weber not only transformed this ethical principle into a normative system for the governing of human relations, but employed it specifically in order to critique and overcome patriarchy: only autonomy as a ``form principle'' will enable women to achieve their full humanity as moral agents. In sum, then, Weber's discussion of Kantian ethics consists, on the one hand, of a call to women to recapture their own autonomy. Women sacrifice their humanity and dignity by allowing their will to be determined by anything but their own reason and conscience. On the other hand, the author indicted the structurally mandated author- ity of men over women throughout history because, under it, men have violated the categorical imperative by failing to treat women as ends and not merely as means. As a result, women have been structurally deprived of their very humanity, because they have not been permitted to fully develop as reasoning moral agents. The woman's liberation from male authority through modernity. After examining mar- riage through history, the author turned her attention toward an investigation of the current character of the marital institution. To accomplish this, she focused on the influence of Industrialization and its new material conditionsin short, modernityon marriage and women's lives. In this context, she noted that, while the maxim of autonomy had existed before Industrialization, it had not been applied to women. The material conditions of the new economy, in contrast, forced greater autonomy on women by placing them in ``superpersonal contexts and structures that remove them from personal domination.'' Prior to Industrialization, woman's relations were limited to the home and family, and, as such, her identity and consciousness were exclusively oriented toward her interactions with husband, children, and other family members. However, the industrial economy withdrew women from the restrictive interactions of the home and inserted them into the diverse interactions of the extrafamilial world, in which actors decide autonomously and are responsible for the consequences of those decisions. This physical involvement outside the home also resulted in the woman's intellectual emancipation. Both aspects, the physical and the intellectual, challenged the husband's authority over his wife and fundamentally changed the character of marriage. Thus, in theoretical terms, Weber observed that the power of one individual over another is not simply dependent upon the relation between the two, but can be intensified or ameliorated by the number and type of interactions within which the subordinate finds herself in general. Furthermore, it is worth noting that, in contrast to other sociologists of her generation who studied the drastic changes in the modern world, Weber clearly emphasized women's liberation from the home as a chief con- sequence of modernity. Though she observed that, for autonomous individuals, there are many challenges involved in being free to make choices, her evaluation of this development wasin contrast to other members of her intellectual circle, who thought of modernity more ambivalentlyclearly positive. Weber was not only interested in the context and mechanisms of patriarchy, but was, of course, also concerned with the conditions under which liberation from that oppression might be achieved. For her, modernity represented just such liberating conditions. AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 99 The state of modern marriage under authority. Though modernity had forced changes upon the institution of marriage, Weber observed that the governing law had not kept pace. In this regard, German law resembled a ``compromise between irreconcilable principles'' in which the husband still enjoyed ``legally protected predominance'' as an ``indispensable form-principle.'' After concluding her examination of German family law, Weber refocused her inquiry on the ``fundamental question'' of whether ``author- ity or autonomy should shape spouses' relations.'' In order to address this question, she investigated the condition of marriage in reality when, ``in accordance with its legal form,'' the husband's ``fundamental authority'' continued to govern the partners' relationship, though that legal authority was increasingly at odds with the conditions and consequences of modernity. In framing her argument, Weber first reiterated, as a general proposition, the importance of marriage for the development of both partners by stating that ``[M]ari- tal relationships encompass the entire person, and that which one spouse does and feels, touches necessarily at some point the life of the other.'' With this theoretical assumption in mind, Weber asserted that marriage based on the form principle of authority not only adversely shapes both partners' conduct and their individual development, but, consequently, also hinders the growth and health of their relation- ship to one another. First, regarding women's conduct, she noted, for example, two alternative courses of action in the context of the wife's subordination: mere feigned submissionthat is, acting with deceit and trickery toward her husband; or her actual suppression of her own reason and the consequent abandonment of her very human- ity. Similarly, with regard to the husband, authority shapes his conduct by making him increasingly interested in controlling and monitoring his wife's every thought and move. Besides describing how this structurally mandated form principle affects the con- duct of both men and women, Weber also described the consequences of this influence for each. With respect to wives, she cited women's stalled ``inner development,'' and, as such, on the one hand, related, in a theoretical sense, the influence of institutional norms not only to mere conduct, but to the development of the individual's person- ality as well. On the other hand, ``inner development'' refers specifically to the individual's ability to employ moral reason while obeying the categorical imperative. As such, women who submit to the principle of authority lose their ability to act as responsible moral agents, and, by doing so, they violate their own dignity and humanity as well. This suppression of the woman's development will, according to Weber, also has grave consequences for the husband and his development, because, as a result, he will experience no intellectual and spiritual stimulation or challenge in his marriage, and will thus forfeit this fundamental source of strength, inspiration, and growth. Finally, the author notes that, by shaping the conduct and development of both partners, authority ultimately defines their relationship, which, in turn, will also have long-term effects on their personal development. Weber concluded her investigation of marriage by defining it as ``a life's partner- ship which is founded on the affinity of souls and senses, and on the desire for full responsibility.'' In perhaps one final statement against meaningless sexual love, the author also explained the ethical significance of marriage as ``the highest ideal of human community that stands as an unshakable guiding star above the sexual life of civilized humanity.'' As Weber stated in her concluding comments, it is increasingly difficult to make a marriage between two people work across the years. But, as she explained in beauti- fully tender language in her concluding paragraph, only constant intellectual and 100 SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY spiritual growth on the part of both partners will keep a relationship flourishing over a lifetime of changes and challenges. In order to realize this growth, the man and the woman must enjoy autonomy. CONCLUSION In my introduction to Marianne Weber's ``Authority and Autonomy in Marriage,'' I briefly examined her importance to the field of sociology and called for scholarly attention to her work. In this short commentary, I have attempted to make a small contribution toward that aim by addressing several key aspects of her thought. First, Weber recognized the role of ideas as shaping forces in history and engaged in an ideal-typical investigation of that history. However, in contrast to other think- ers, she did not shy away from value assessments in her use of ideal types, and she offered ``autonomy'' as her ``ideal'' type of marriage. Additionally, in viewing the importance of ideas in history, the author recognized that, though institutions had produced potentially liberating thought, powerful actors had manipulated and instru- mentalized those ideas in the interests of patriarchy. Second, in an investigation that yields striking parallels to her husband's work on the religious origins of capitalism, Weber investigated religionspecifically, the Prot- estant spiritand showed that Protestant moral standards of conduct affected indi- viduals' consciousness and conduct and ultimately had great significance for the character of marriage, which continues to affect that institution today. Third, Weber employed the Kantian Enlightenment ideal of autonomy in an innovative way. In order for women to attain their full humanity by becoming autonomous, reasoning moral actors who are subjugated only under the categorical imperative, the author advocated the adoption of ``autonomy'' as a structural ``form- principle'' of marriage. Thus, though she subscribed to Kant's ideal of individual freedom, the author also recognized the importance of this ideal as a social structural norm in order to allow all people to attain that freedom. Fourth, Weber asserted that modern conditions had begun a positive process that freed women from men's authority by removing them from the exclusive, isolated sphere of the home and placing them in ``superpersonal contexts'' in which they could participate in diverse interactions. In this study of the modern economy, Weber's ideas yield the theoretical assertion that the quality and diversity of interactions within which an individual exists affect the dynamics of power within each one of those interactions. Further, though individual conduct is shaped by institutionally sanctioned norms, it is also influenced by material conditions, and the resulting character of the interactions and relations that arise out of that conduct ultimately permits or restricts human development. Through her discussion in the final portion of her essay, in a practical sense, the author demonstrated the deficits of authority in the reality of marriage. However, viewed theoretically, her examination revealed, first, her theoretical assumption of the importance of marriageand all sexual relationsfor the development of the human personality. Second, it displayed Weber's understanding of the relation between social structure, in the form of moral standards of conduct, individuals, and their inter- actions. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, it reiterated the author's belief that individuals' ability to achieve an individualistic Enlightenment ideal is dependent upon a structurally enforced form principle, legally mandated ``autonomy'' in marriage. This necessity of structure to achieve individual ``humanity'' represents a significant AUTHORITY AND AUTONOMY IN MARRIAGE 101 departure from Kant's ideas and intent and addresses the difficult theoretical tension between human freedom and structural constraints in a very novel way. REFERENCES Bendix, R. 1960. Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait. Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., Inc. Britton, A. C. 1979. ``The Life and Thought of Marianne Weber.'' Master's thesis, San Francisco State University. Kant, I. 1972. Grundlegung zur Metaphysik der Sitten. Edited by Wilhelm Weischedel. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp. Nietzsche, F. 1966. Thus Spoke Zarathustra: A Book for All and None. Translated by Walter Kaufmann. New York: Viking. . 1994. 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