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“If I have kids one day, it feels weird to me to just completely give up [my surname].”
The couple would later split, but the conversation stuck with her.
A long and patriarchal tradition
In the 90s, this all changed again: more women in this age bracket took their husband’s name as societal pressures and conservative social views re-emerged.
Are more women keeping their surnames?
“I do feel like the compromise is always expected to come from the women’s part a lot of the time.”
“The concern is that as long as we believe that these stereotypes are real — and that women and men are fundamentally different and should have different roles just because of their gender — then it’s likely to be problematic in a range of areas that might not be necessarily obvious,” Alba says.
‘A stubbornness to adhere to old fashioned norms’
But Alba says that for some people, not taking the husband’s name can be seen as showing less commitment to the relationship.
Some have worked around that by giving their children a double-barrelled surname that includes the names of both parents.
Men flipping the script
She was already keen to keep her surname for her professional identity.
Liz’s husband took her name to honour her father. Source: Supplied / Tizia May
“It was actually him [her husband] who suggested that maybe I’d like to take your name to honour your dad and keep the family name going,” Liz told The Feed.
He took her Italian surname: he had a long Greek surname that many found difficult to pronounce. But, part of this decision was also to honour both families’ cultural backgrounds, such as baptising their children in the Greek Orthodox church.
Their children also use her surname.
Some couples find innovative ways around tradition
Some couples choose to start anew. Jade, 29, started dating a man with the same surname as her ex. As their marriage approached, they constructed a new surname.

Jade’s partner shares her ex-boyfriend’s surname — so the pair decided to create an entirely new name. Source: Supplied
“I don’t really resonate with his last name … and he doesn’t resonate with my last name,” Jade told The Feed.
“Some traditions are hard to break.”