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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
9 pages in length. The writer reviews three articles relating to marriage, addressing sex, religion, violence and dyadic perspectives. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCcoupl.rtf
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paper properly! I. MARITAL QUALITY: A PRODUCT OF THE DYADIC ENVIRONMENT OR INDIVIDUAL FACTORS? Does marriage work because of individual perceptions brought into the relationship or because of the
dyadic element created by the notion of man and wife? Johnson et al (1998) relate the fact that research findings have identified a more significant association between marital quality
and the dyadic environment over and above individual factors, noting the following two primary dyadic components: 1. the emergent properties of the relationship that reflect the personalities of both
spouses meshed in a complex catalytic manner 2. the nature of responses by alter to behavior by ego very early in the relationship quickly become established patterns that define its
quality (Johnson et al, 1998, p. 883). Utilizing the following four paradigms, the student will be able to readily associate the prevalent
dyadic components with regard to marital quality: marital happiness: incorporating each partners overall happiness, strength of love and satisfactions with particular elements within the marriage; marital interaction: the level of
participation each partner extends in daily activities; marital disagreement: "the severity and amount of verbal and physical conflict present in the relationship" (Johnson et al, 1998, p. 883); and marital
problems: establishing whether specific traits of each individual is the motivating factor behind marital problems (Johnson et al, 1998). According to Myers (1997), "the recent literature on marital quality
does not support the assumption that marital solidarity is inversely related to marital duration" (p. 1271). Support for the dyadic environment over and above individual factors indicates the inconsequential aspects
of successive marriages. Johnson et al (1998) indicate that while overwhelming data finds in support of dyadic perception in relation to stability in marital quality, there also exists some
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