The family's construction of reality

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

The family's construction of reality

David Reiss

Harvard University Press, 1981

  • : cloth
  • : paper

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Note

Bibliography: p. [401]-412

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

David Reiss presents a new model of family interaction grounded in the subtle and complex way in which a family constructs its inner life and deals with the outside world. Based upon fifteen years of research, the book offers a new understanding of the covert processes that hold a family together and, with distressing frequency, pull it apart.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Charting Our Course Part 1: Family Problem Solving and Family Interpreting 1. The Family Construction of the Laboratory Family Information Processing and Schizophrenia A Theoretical Sketch of Family Information Processing Three Measures of Family Information Processing Schizophrenia and Family Information Processing Beyond Family Information Processing: The Family Construes the Laboratory The Concept of a Shared Construct A Typology of Shared Constructs Dimensions of Family Constructs 2. Family Problem Solving and Shared Construing Strategy One: Comparing Three Groups of Families Strategy Two: Direct Assessments of Shared Construing Strategy Three: Pursuing Significant Alternate Hypotheses Part 2: Family Crisis and Family Paradigm 3. The Role of the Family in Organizing Experience Personal Explanatory Systems The Family as Originator of Explanatory Systems How Prevalent Is the Originative Family? 4. Crisis and the Development of the Family Paradigm Outline of a New Model Family Stress and Disorganization Vulnerability to Stress and Disorganization Family Reorganization 5. The Abstraction of the Family Paradigm The Need for Abstraction The Process of Social Abstraction The Results of Abstraction Abstraction and Paradigm 6. The Conservation of the Family Paradigm The Temporal Patterning of Crisis and Change The Medium of Conservation Interaction Behavior in the Conservation of the Family Paradigm The Specificity of Conservation Part 3: The Family's Bond to Its Social World 7. Orienting Concepts in Family--Environment Organization The Cycle Hypothesis Components of the Cycle Hypothesis Links between the Family and Its Social World Organizing Constructions in the Social Environment Paradigm, Code, Map, and Objective: Central Correspondences ' Family Paradigm, Links, and Environment: A Concluding Example 8. Exploring the Cycle Hypothesis The Organizational Objective Short--Term Links between the Family and the Environment Long--Term Links between the Family and the Environment Matching the Cycle Hypothesis and the Findings Conclusion. A Second Look at Shared Constructs Notes References Index

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