(Press-News.org) Don't be so quick to judge.
Most people are familiar with the "trophy wife" stereotype that attractive women marry
rich men, placing little importance on their other traits, including physical appearance,
and that men look for pretty wives but don't care about their education or earnings.
New research, however, by University of Notre Dame Sociologist Elizabeth McClintock,
shows the trophy wife stereotype is largely a myth fueled by selective observation that
reinforces sexist stereotypes and trivializes women's careers.
In "Beauty and Status: The Illusion of Exchange in Partner Selection?" forthcoming in
American Sociological Review, McClintock resolves the paradox between the trophy
wife stereotype and the evidence that couples match on both physical attractiveness and
socioeconomic status.
Using, for the first time, a nationally representative sample of young couples in which
both partners were interviewed and rated for physical attractiveness, McClintock was
able to control for matching on attractiveness. She says prior research in this area has
ignored two important factors.
"I find that handsome men partner with pretty women and successful men partner with
successful women," says McClintock, who specializes in inequality within romantic
partnerships. "So, on average, high-status men do have better-looking wives, but this is
because they themselves are considered better looking--perhaps because they are less
likely to be overweight and more likely to afford braces, nice clothes and trips to the
dermatologist, etc. Secondly, the strongest force by far in partner selection is similarity
— in education, race, religion and physical attractiveness."
McClintock's research shows that there is not, in fact, a general tendency for women to
trade beauty for money. That is not to say trophy wife marriages never happen, just that
they are very rare.
"Donald Trump and his third wife Melania Knauss-Trump may very well exemplify
the trophy wife stereotype," McClintock says. "But, there are many examples of rich
men who partner with successful women rather than 'buying' a supermodel wife.
The two men who founded Google (Larry Page and Sergey Brin) both married highly
accomplished women—one has a PhD and the other is a wealthy entrepreneur."
McClintock says the trophy wife stereotype is most often wrongly-applied among non-
celebrities.
"I've heard doctors' wives referred to as trophy wives by observers who only notice her
looks and his status and fail to realize that he is good-looking too and that she is also a
successful professional--or was before she had kids and left her job," McClintock says.
McClintock's research also indicates that, contrary to the trophy wife stereotype, social
class barriers in the marriage market are relatively impermeable. Beautiful women are
unlikely to leverage their looks to secure upward mobility by marriage.
INFORMATION:
'Trophy wife' stereotype is largely a myth, new study shows
2014-06-17
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