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The effort to understand personal relationships has traditionally
focused on the individual characteristics of participants.
"Personal Relationships and Personal Networks "takes this analysis
a step further, focusing on research linking participants' feelings
and actions within a given personal relationship to the larger
social context surrounding it. Author Malcolm R. Parks expands on
the idea that the initiation, development, maintenance, and
dissolution of relationships are inextricably connected to each
participant's social network-a perspective that allows for a better
appreciation of our connection to the world, and a greater
understanding our significant power as social actors.
This book offers a new way to consider basic notions about how
relationships form, such as how particular people meet, and how
relationships are started. Among many findings, the volume
demonstrates that individuals in relationships feel closer and
generally more connected when they also have a greater amount of
contact with the members of each other's personal networks and when
they believe that network members support their relationship.
Additional topics discussed include how this social context model
is applicable to different types of relationships; how participants
interact with network members; how social networks are involved in
the deterioration of personal relationships; and what drives change
in relationships.
Students, researchers, and professionals in a wide variety of
disciplines such as communication, psychology, sociology,
anthropology, family studies, clinical psychology, public health
nursing, education, and social work will find this book useful, as
willanyone seeking to better understand their own personal
relationships.
The effort to understand personal relationships has traditionally
focused on the individual characteristics of participants.
"Personal Relationships and Personal Networks "takes this analysis
a step further, focusing on research linking participants' feelings
and actions within a given personal relationship to the larger
social context surrounding it. Author Malcolm R. Parks expands on
the idea that the initiation, development, maintenance, and
dissolution of relationships are inextricably connected to each
participant's social network-a perspective that allows for a better
appreciation of our connection to the world, and a greater
understanding our significant power as social actors.
This book offers a new way to consider basic notions about how
relationships form, such as how particular people meet, and how
relationships are started. Among many findings, the volume
demonstrates that individuals in relationships feel closer and
generally more connected when they also have a greater amount of
contact with the members of each other's personal networks and when
they believe that network members support their relationship.
Additional topics discussed include how this social context model
is applicable to different types of relationships; how participants
interact with network members; how social networks are involved in
the deterioration of personal relationships; and what drives change
in relationships.
Students, researchers, and professionals in a wide variety of
disciplines such as communication, psychology, sociology,
anthropology, family studies, clinical psychology, public health
nursing, education, and social work will find this book useful, as
willanyone seeking to better understand their own personal
relationships.
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