dc.description.abstract | Before describing the history, purpose, and structure
of this book, it seems appropriate to identify
an unintentional and latent theme in this
Handbook of Marriage and the Family, 3rd
Edition . As we edited these excellent chapters, a
covert theme seemed to emerge in this immense
amount of knowledge that explains why people
seek to live in the diversity of family forms and
close relationships described in this book. An
essential theme that courses through these pages
is that families, in their various forms, may be
the primary means to address two fundamental
interpersonal relationship needs: connection and
autonomy. Reduced to their essence, family
members, following the human inclination for
social bonding, seek to address the elemental
relationship question: “How to balance one’s
needs for connections with others while, at the
same time, af fi rming one’s individuality within
their interpersonal relationships?” | en_US |