Ties That Stress: The New Family ImbalanceWhat has happened to the American family in the last few decades? And what are these changes doing to our children? A renowned child psychologist and author of several influential works on child development, David Elkind has devoted his career to these urgent questions. This eloquent book - the culmination of his inquiry - puts together all the pieces, puzzling facts, and conflicting accounts, and shows us as never before what the American family has become. Today's postmodern family is under enormous stress. And as a result, the needs of hurried children have been sacrificed to the needs of their harried parents. Childhood innocence has been supplanted by the illusion of childhood competence; teenage immaturity has given way to pseudo-sophistication; and parental intuition has been traded in for a mechanical reliance on technique. These changes and a host of others have undermined the well-being of children and adolescents. From Freud to Friedan to Foucault, Elkind traces the roots of the postmodern family back to the failure of the modern nuclear family and its supporting institutions - the media, the so-called helping professions, the legal system, and the schools - to meet the needs of parents. The new postmodern family is more flexible, more permeable, more urbane, but also out of balance because it fails to meet the needs of children. Treated like miniature adults, today's children and adolescents go without the protection and security they need, while their once-sheltered baby-boomer parents, facing new economic pressures for which they are unprepared, secretly wonder why they've never really felt like grown-ups. But all is not bleak. Elkind finds evidence of an emerging vital family that melds the best of the modern and postmodern, one in which the needs of all family members are held in a dynamic, if delicate, balance. Many books have decried the decline in family values, the negative impact of divorce, the increase in single-mother families, and impoverished prospects for our children. But none has pulled all these fragments together as Elkind's does and put them into a solid framework, one that finally makes sense of the way we were, and what we as families may become. |
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abuse adolescents adulthood adults advicegivers autonomy behavior believe Benjamin Spock Betty Friedan chil child development childcare childhood childrearing children and adolescents children and youth competence consensual love contemporary demands developmental discourse divorce dren dysfunction early emotional emphasis Erikson example family imbalance family members feel Freud Friedrich Froebel Ginott helping professions high school ideal individual infants language marital marriage maternal love modern family modern parents mothers mutual authority need imbalance needs of children nuclear family nurturance old imbalance perception of adolescent permeable family person Philippe Ariès play postmod postmodern children postmodern family postmodern parents postmodern writers programs protection psychological reflect regarded relationship responsibility role romantic love sense sentiment sexual activity sexual revolution shared parenting Sigmund Freud social society sophistication stress stressors teachers techniques teenagers television theory tion unilateral authority urbanity value of togetherness vital family women young children
