Shared Obliviousness in Family Systems

Author(s) : Paul C. Rosenblatt

Shared Obliviousness in Family Systems

Book Details

  • Publisher : State University of New York Press
  • Published : January 2009
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 198
  • Category :
    Family, Couple and Systemic Therapy
  • Catalogue No : 29201
  • ISBN 13 : 9781438427324
  • ISBN 10 : 1438427328

Also by Paul C. Rosenblatt

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Introduces the concept of obliviousness to the consideration of family systems - what do families choose to ignore and why and how they do so. The modern family is inundated with information and no family can attend to it all; families must set priorities and remain oblivious to much. Obliviousness is the intriguing subject of Paul C. Rosenblatt's speculative and theoretical work. The hidden undersides of what families are aware of, know, and talk about are vast and complex, maintained at times with great effort, linked to important matters in the family and in society, necessary for family functioning but also, at times, a source of great difficulty. How are areas of obliviousness built up and maintained? How does a family overcome obliviousness that creates difficulty? Drawing on work in family systems, family therapy, whiteness and privilege, and social construction, among other research, this book is enlightening for all who work with, study, and care about the family.

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Introduces the concept of obliviousness to the consideration of family systems - what do families choose to ignore and why and how they do so. The modern family is inundated with information and no family can attend to it all; families must set priorities and remain oblivious to much. Obliviousness is the intriguing subject of Paul C. Rosenblatt's speculative and theoretical work. The hidden undersides of what families are aware of, know, and talk about are vast and complex, maintained at times with great effort, linked to important matters in the family and in society, necessary for family functioning but also, at times, a source of great difficulty. How are areas of obliviousness built up and maintained? How does a family overcome obliviousness that creates difficulty? Drawing on work in family systems, family therapy, whiteness and privilege, and social construction, among other research, this book is enlightening for all who work with, study, and care about the family.

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