The Supreme Court and gay marriage: a reading list
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On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court begins hearing arguments in two cases that could become landmarks of American legal history: challenges to Proposition 8, the 2008 voter initiative that outlawed gay marriage in California, and to the 1996 federal Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as between a man and a woman.
The final decision wonât be announced for months, but thereâs quite a few books that offer insight into the Supreme Court and the issues of same-sex marriage to tide you over until then.
âSupreme Court Decisions,â part of the excellent 2012 Penguin Civic Classics series, is a fascinating, highly accessible survey of 30 of the courtâs most important decisions. Read through them and you get the sense that American legal history is the story of a court constantly navigating between competing visions of Americanâs rights and freedoms.
FULL COVERAGE: The battle over gay marriage
Supporters of gay marriage might hope for the simple eloquence of the statement of 1954âs ruling in Brown vs. the Board of Education: âWe conclude that, in the field of public education, the doctrine of âseparate but equalâ has no place.â But defenders of tradition marriage can take heart in the 2000 Boy Scouts of America vs. Dale, in which the court ruled that the Boy Scoutsâ 1st Amendment rights meant they didnât have to accept an openly gay troop leader: âthe freedom of association⊠plainly presupposes a freedom not to associate.â
New Yorker and CNN analyst Jeffrey Toobin famously got it wrong when he predicted that the court would overturn President Obamaâs healthcare law, but his two books on the court, 2007âs âThe Nineâ and last yearâs âThe Oathâ are still essential reading.
In one of its most famous decisions on marriage, Loving vs. Virginia, the court threw out anti-miscegenation laws that prevented interracial couples from marrying in several states. The influence of that case, and its possible implications for the gay marriage debate, are the series of essays published last June by Cambridge University Press, âLoving v. Virginia in a Post-Racial World: Rethinking Race, Sex, and Marriage.â
A series of books in recent years have dealt with the debate from the perspective of the gay rightsâ movement: âWhy Marriage Matters: America, Equality, and Gay Peopleâs Right to Marry,â by Evan Wolfson; and âThe Long Arc of Justice: Lesbian and Gay Marriage, Equality, and Rights,â by Richard Mohr.
If youâre looking for something more inspirational, thereâs âThe Air We Breathe,â a book released by the San Francisco Museum of Art in 2011 in which several artists and poets create works inspirted by the debate.
And, of course, these days thereâs a kidâs book for just about every issue. âMy Uncleâs Weddingâ is popular with those who support same-sex marriage. It begins, âThereâs so much to do now that Uncle Mike and Steve are getting married.â
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