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Stress and Coping in Families

ISBN: 978-0-745-65075-3

March 2012

Polity

192 pages

Description
During difficult times, families can be our greatest resource, or our heaviest burden. This book brings together research from a wide variety of disciplines to examine family interaction in the context of stressful situations. Instead of claiming that one type of interaction is better than other, seemingly unproductive forms of communication, the approach taken by the author recognizes that messages can have varying, sometimes unexpected consequences when a family is distressed. In addition to introducing students, scholars, and practitioners to the stress and coping literatures from both the individual and family perspectives, the book offers an in-depth examination of how relational communication scholars have contributed to this important and rich body of research. The book also explores family stress and coping within three specific contexts (military family separation, breast cancer, the transition to parenthood) and provides readers with the opportunity to apply their knowledge through case studies and examples from families who have lived through these difficult situations.
About the Author
Katheryn C. Maguire is Assistant Professor of Communication at Wayne State University.
Features
  • Synthesizes literature from a wide variety of disciplines to examine family interaction in the context of stressful situations.
  • Designed as a textbook within Polity’s Key Themes in Family Communication series.
  • Looks at the topic of stress and coping across the individual, relational and family levels.
  • Employs case studies to give students a grounded application of the theory.