Look at the words and phrases and try to explain their meaning.

 


industrialized societies

irretrievable breakdown of marriage

Proposed laws

Welfare

adultery

socially acceptable

the rise in the divorce rate

break-up of a marriage


5 Divorce is one of the most important problems in our society now. Read the text below and list two possible reasons for the divorce rate rising sharply since the Second World War.

The History of Divorce in the 20th Century

 


In the past, families tended to stay together. They felt it was their duty to do this and that marriage was for life. Divorce was not socially acceptable. It was a commonly held view that a bad marriage was better than no marriage at all.

In Britain, as in many industrialized societies, there has been a steady rise in the numbers of divorces. The Second World War disrupted a lot of marriages, due to enforced separation and hasty marriages which were later regretted. Immediately after the war there were a record number of divorces and the proportion of marriages involving a divorced partner grew from 2% in 1940 to 32% in 1985.

Legal changes in this century have made it much easier to get a divorce. The most dramatic change resulted from the 1971 divorce law. The law stated that there needed to be only one reason for a divorce petition – the “irretrievable breakdown of marriage.” This was a much wider category than the previous ones of cruelty, insanity, desertion or adultery.

The change in the law had an immediate effect. In 1972 there were over 119,000 divorces in England and Wales and the rate has continued to rise. The total number in 1990 was over 153,000, around 2% higher than in 1989. Proposed laws may make divorce even easier. Couples can now afford the legal side of getting and surviving a divorce more easily than at any time in the past. However, for many families it is still an economic disaster as well as being emotionally difficult.

Another possible reason behind the rise in the divorce rate is the changing attitude to marriage itself in the 20th century. The traditional Christian approach to marriage has been against divorce. As the Church becomes less influential in the Western Europe, the view of marriage as a union for life has weakened. The result is that the break-up of a marriage is seen as less of a moral crisis and more as a matter of personal happiness.

Perhaps the people most affected by a divorce are the children. According to current forecasts, about 20% of children in Britain, for example, will experience family breakdown by the age of 16. There has been growing concern for such children, who are usually between the ages of five and ten. Recent laws have indicated that first consideration should be given to the welfare of the children when making financial arrangements after a divorce.

 

(Catherine Addis. Britain now: British life and institutions. BBC English. 1994.)


 

6 Look through the questions below and share your ideas with the partners:

       
   
 
 
 
 

 

 


7 Divide the text above into logical parts and give each part a title.

 

8 Prepare a summary of the text.

 

9 Give a direct translation of the underlined parts of the text.