Synopses & Reviews
Now featured in a Classics Edition with a new Foreword by Donald Boch, The Expanded Family Life Cycle integrates theory and current research with clinical guidelines and cases by two of the most-respected authors, teachers, and clinicians in the field of family therapy, Betty Carter and Monica McGoldrick.
This classic Family Therapy text provides “and more comprehensive way to think about human development and the life cycle,” reflecting changes in society away from orientation toward the nuclear family, toward a more diverse and inclusive definition of “family.”
This expanded view of the family includes the impact of issues at multiple levels of the human system: the individual, family households, the extended family, the community, the cultural group, and the larger society. The text features a ground-breaking integration of individual male and female development in systemic context; our increasing racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity; the emergence of men's movements and issues; the growing visibility of lesbian and gay families; and the neglected area of social class.
Synopsis
Provides an overview of the Family Life Cycle, integrating theory and current research with clinical guidelines and cases. Family Life Cycle and family diversity. Anyone interested in furthering their understanding of family therapy.
About the Author
Monica McGoldrick, M.A., M.S.W, Ph.D. (h.c.), is the Director of the Multicultural Family Institute in Highland Park, NJ, and on Psychiatry Faculty of the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. Her other books include: Ethnicity and Family Therapy, 3rd ed; Genograms: Assessment and Intervention, 3rd ed. Living Beyond Loss: 2nd ed; Revisioning Family Therapy: Race, Culture, and Gender in Clinical Practice, 2nd ed; and The Genogram Journey: Reconnecting with your Family- to be published by W. W. Norton in the Fall of 2010,whichtranslates her ideas about family relationships for a popular audience, using examples such as Beethoven, Groucho Marx, Sigmund Freud and the Kennedys.
She received her BA from Brown University, a Masters in Russian Studies from Yale University, and her M.S.W and an Honorary Doctorate from Smith College School for Social Work. Dr. McGoldrick is known internationally for her writings and teaching on topics including culture, class, gender, loss, family patterns (genograms), remarried families, and sibling relationships. Her clinical videotape demonstrating the use of the life cycle perspective with a multicultural remarried family dealing with issues of unresolved mourning has become one of the most widely respected videotapes available in the field.
Betty Carter, M.S.W., founder and Director Emerita (1977-1997) of the Family Institute of Westchester in White Plains, New York, spent over 30 years as a family therapy clinician, supervisor, teacher, and director of a major training institute. She received awards from the American Family Therapy Academy, Hunter College School of Social work, and the American Association of marriage and Family Therapy Research and Education Foundation. With her colleagues Peggy Papp, Olga Silverstein and Marianne Walters she co-founded the Women’s Project in Family Therapy, which promoted a feminist revisioning of family therapy and received awards from both the Family Therapy Academy and the AAMFT. Their work culminated in a book on gender-sensitive family therapy practice: The Invisible Web: Gender Patterns in Family Therapy Relationships.
In 1996 Betty Carter authored a trade book on couples, Love, Honor and Negotiate: Building Partnerships That Last a Lifetime. She published numerous professional book chapters and journal articles, along with educational videotapes produced by Steve Lerner for Guilford Press. Married to her husband Sam, a musician, for over 50 years, Betty has two sons and three grandchildren. She has said that of all her ideas she always loved the family life cycle framework most “because it contains all the other ideas and has room for more.”
Nydia Garcia-Preto, M.S.W., is the Associate Director at the Multicultural Family Institute in Highland Pk., NJ where she also has a Private Practice. Ms. Garcia-Preto was formerly a Visiting Professor at the Rutgers Graduate School of Social Work, and for many years the Director of the Adolescent Day Hospital, at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. She received her MSW from Rutgers Graduate School of Social Work and her BA in Sociology at Rider College. A highly respected family therapist, author, and teacher, and organizational trainer, she has publications in textbooks and journals on issues of cultural competence, Puerto Rican and Latino families, Latinas, immigration, ethnic intermarriage, and families with adolescents. She is co-editor of the most recent edition of Ethnicity and Family Therapy. Ms. Garcia-Preto received the Frantz Fanon, M.D. Award from the Post Graduate Center for Mental Health for her work Puerto Rican and Latino adolescents and families, and the Social Justice Award from The American Family Therapy Academy. She and her colleagues at MFI have developed many training for many years on multiculturalism in clinical work, and organizational consulting on cultural competence.
CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS
Constance Ahrons, Ph.D., Professor emerita and former director of the Marriage and Family Therapy Doctoral Program, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Private practice in San Diego.
Carol Anderson, MSW, Ph.D., Professor, University of Pittsburgh Medical School, Pittsburgh, PA. Editor, Family Process.
Marie Anderson, MSW, Mental health with low income populations, Pittsburgh, PA.
Deidre Ashton, MSSW, LCSW, Faculty/Supervisor, Center for Family, Community, and Social Justice, Inc. Princeton, NJ. Faculty, Ackerman Institute for the Family, New York, NY. Couple and Family Therapist, Princeton Family Institute, Princeton, NJ.
Kathy Berliner, LCSW, Marriage and Family Therapist. Former faculty Family Institute of Westchester.
Ellen Berman, MD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Lynne Blacker, LCSW, Clinical Coordinator, Family Intervention Services, Morristown, NJ
Celia Jaes Falicov, Ph.D., Private Practice, San Diego, CA., Clinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Univ. of California, San Diego, CA
Richard H. Fulmer, Ph.D., Postocostoral Programs in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, Adelphi University, Garden City, NY. Private practice, New York, NY
Alison Heru, MD, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, University of Colorado, Denver
Paulette Moore Hines, Ph.D., Director, Office of Prevention Services & Research, a division of UBHC-University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ.
Evan Imber-Black, Ed.D., Faculty, Ackerman Institute for Family Therapy, New York, NY
Demaris Jacobs, Ph.D., Former faculty Family Institute of Westchester
Jodie Kilman, Ph.D., Core faculty of the Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology, Boston, MA; founding member of the Boston Institute for Culturally Accountable Practice
Tracey Laszloffy, Ph.D., Private practice, Norwich, CT
Steve Lerner, Ph.D., Private Practice, Topeka, KS Matthew Mock, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, John F. Kennedy University; Private Clinical and Consulting Practice, Berkeley, California; former Director, Center for Multicultural Development, California Institute for Mental Health (CIMH) and Drector, Family, Youth, Childern's and Multicultural Services, City of Berkeley, California.
Barbara Petkov, LMFT, Ed.S., Private practice, Highland Park; Alumni, MFI, Core Faculty MFI. Experience with children, adolescents, couples and families. Certified in EMDR. Trainer in cultural diversity
Sueli Petry, Ph.D., Alumna & Faculty of MFI. Experience with Latino families and with survivors of sexual abuse. Publications on Genograms, Brazilian families
John Rolland, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Chicago and Co-Director, Chicago Center for Family Health, Chicago, IL.
Mary Anne Ross, BA, COPSA Institute for Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders, CMHC Piscataway University of Medicine and Dentistry of N.J.
Natalie Schwartzberg, LCSW, Marriage and Family Therapist. Former faculty Family Institute of Westchester.
Froma Walsh, MSW, Ph.D., Co-Founder, Chicago Center for Family Health, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Professor, School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Editor, Journal of Marital and Family Therapy
Marlene Watson, Ph.D., Associate Professor and the Director of Programs in Couple and Family therapy at Drexel University in Philadelphia
David Wohlsifer, LCSW, Ph.D., Private Practice, Bala Psychological Resources, Bala Cynwyd, PA; Adjunct Professor, Bryn Mawr College, Graduate School of Social Work; Social Research, Univ. of Pennsylvania’s School of Social Policy and Practice
Table of Contents
Most chapters include “Conclusions,” “Concluding Remarks,” and an “Introduction.”
Preface.
I. CONCEPTUAL PERSPECTIVES.
1. Overview: The Expanded Family Life Cycle: Individual, Family, and Social Perspectives, Betty Carter and Monica McGoldrick.
The Family Life Cycle.
The Family as a System Moving through Time.
The Individual in the Family and in History.
The Vertical and Horizontal Flow of Stress in the Life Cycle.
Anxiety and Symptom Development.
The Changing Family Life Cycle.
The Expanded Family Life Cycle: Individual Development.
Contemporary Families.
Our Life Cycles Unfold in the Context of the Community of Our Connectedness.
The Larger Society.
The Changing Structure of Families.
Multiculturalism.
The Political and Economic System.
The American Family of the Future.
Clinical Implications: The Multicontextual Framework.
Assessing Individual Development.
Assessing the Immediate Family Household(s).
Assessing the Extended Family.
Assessing the Family's Community and Social Connections.
Assessing the Impact on Clients Hierarchy and Power Inequality in the Larger Social Structures of Society.
A Method of Including the Sociocultural Context in Family Therapy.
2. Self in Context: The Individual Life Cycle in Systemic Perspective, Monica McGoldrick and Betty Carter.
Redefining the Dimensions of Human Development.
Developing a Self in Context.
The Myths of Complete Autonomy and Self-Determination.
Developing a Mature Interdependent Self.
It Takes a Village.
Gendered Development: From Adam's Rib.
Developing a Self in a Nonaffirming Environment.
Our Multiple Intelligences.
The Connected Self.
Countering Unequal Gender, Class, Cultural, and Racial Socialization.
The Individual Life Cycle in Context.
The "Slings and Arrows" as Individual, Family, and Community Intersect.
Developing an Autonomous and Emotionally Connected Self.
3. History, Genograms, and the Family Life Cycle: Freud in Context, Monica McGoldrick.
Using Genograms to Track Family History through the Family Life Cycle.
Courtship and Marriage of Freud's Parents: The Joining of Families.
The Transition to Parenthood and Families with Young Children.
Families with Adolescents.
Families at Midlife: Launching Children and Moving on.
Marriage: The Next Generation.
Parenthood: The Next Generation.
Families in Later Life.
4. Culture and the Family Life Cycle, Paulette Moore Hines, Nydia Garcia Preto, Monica McGoldrick, Rhea Almeida, and Susan Weltman.
Life Cycle Stages.
African American Families.
Latino Families.
Irish Families.
Asian Indian Families.
Jewish Families.
5. Social Class and the Family Life Cycle, Jodie Kliman and William Madsen.
Understanding Social Class.
Class Influences on the Family Life Cycle: Challenges and Possibilities.
Three Families.
Therapeutic Implications of the Intersection of Class and the Family Life Cycle.
6. Women and the Family Life Cycle, Monica McGoldrick.
Women's Changing Life Cycle Roles.
Women and Education.
Women and Work.
Women in Families.
Women in the Middle: Women and Caretaking.
Women's Exclusion from Power under the Law and Societal Expectations.
Women and Marriage.
Becoming Mothers.
Adolescence.
Launching Children and Moving on.
Older Families.
Women and Their Friendship Networks.
Women and Loss.
That the Bumble Bee Should Fly: Affirming Women through the Life Cycle.
7. Men in Transition: The "New Man," Elliott J. Rosen.
The New Man and the Legacy of Masculinity.
Is There a “New Man?”
Men and Power.
Men, Friendship, and the Men's Movements.
Men and Their Relationships throughout the Family Life Cycle.
8. The Latino Family Life Cycle, Celia Jaes Falicov.
Family Organization, Migration, and the Family Life Cycle.
The Family with Young Children: Relatedness or Autonomy?
The Family with School-Age Children: Brave in a New World.
Adolescence: Between Two Worlds.
Young Adulthood: Staying Home and Courtship.
Marriage: Separating or Returning to the Fold?
Middle