Meaningful Relationships: Talking, Sense, and RelatingSAGE Publications, 11/05/1994 - 209 من الصفحات Meaningful Relationships challenges the reader to step off traditional academic pathways in the pursuit of understanding the nature of human relationships and plunge into this most important theoretical advance in the field to date. The author, Steve Duck, argues that relationships are never "done deals" but, rather, are continually unfolding and in need of perpetual responsive action and construction. Central to this discussion is the author's contention that relationships are solidly based in the recognition of shared meaning discovered in the way we metaphorically represent the world to ourselves and to others through everyday talk and symbols. Theories presented in Meaningful Relationships do not unfold in a sequential manner but rather are approached from different angles showing simultaneous relationships in different contexts. An outstanding addition to the Sage Series on Close Relationships, this book is stimulating in its novel approach and will be of interest to scholars and students in close relationships, psychology, interpersonal communication, sociology, family studies, and social work. |
المحتوى
Shared Meaning | 1 |
Talk as a Source of Information | 10 |
One Mind Encounters Another | 67 |
حقوق النشر | |
4 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Acitelli another's attitudes attribution theory Baxter behavior beliefs Burke Chapter choices close relationships cognitive communication comprehend construction of meaning construe consubstantiality create culture discussion dyad dyadic dyadic relational effects everyday talk example exchange experience explore express extend fact focus framework George Kelly Hendrick human implications important individual instance interac interaction interpersonal interpersonal attraction interpretation intimacy Journal of Social Kelly Kenneth Burke knowledge language levels Likewise listener marriage Mead memory organization packets metaphors mind Newbury Park one's organization other's particular perceived perception personal meaning system Personal Relationships Planalp present psychological similarity Ralph Vaughan Williams rela relational partners relationship development relationship research rhetorical role S. W. Duck Sage self-disclosure sense shared meaning ships simple Social and Personal social processes Social Psychology someone sorts speaker specific statements style Surra symbols system of meaning theory things thinking thought tion tionship topic transformation vantage point variable