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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 14 page discussion of the multitude of situational factors which can affect the function and inner working of the single parent home as well as its dealings with the outside world. The author discusses the transition of the American idea of the traditional nuclear family to family arrangements involving a single parent household. Factors such as death, divorce and alternative life choices are discussed as well in regard to how they affect family members. Bibliography lists 13 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPfamSng.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
The traditional concept of family, or more specifically the traditional American sociological model of the nuclear family, is one which dates far back into our history. Indeed, the concept
of family itself can be described as the "oldest fundamental of all social institutions" (Sullivan and Thompson, 1994). This concept has changed radically in recent years, however. More
and more frequently our "traditional" families are single parent households or even more unusual twists of the age-old sociological concept of family. Not only do these familial units entail
extreme diversity in family roles, alliances, and interactional patterns, they often are impacted and result in a number of socially constructed myths and assumptions. On the whole, single parent
families face many unique problems related to the familial structure itself (Dinkmeyer, McKay, and McKay, 1987). Although Dinkmeyer, McKay, and McKay (1987) caution that this structure in itself
does not make the single parent family inferior to traditional families, some problems ultimately result. Sometimes, in fact, our radical transition from the American concept of nuclear family to
more unusual sociological constructs of the idea of family even results in a number of psychological problems which must be consequently addressed by the therapeutic community.
The term "nuclear family" brings to mind the American concept of the ideal family, of the mother, the father, and one or more children sharing a common
home. In this concept it is the mother who stays at home and cares for the children and the father who works outside the home in order to provide
financial support for the family (Turnbull and Turnbull, 1990). This traditional concept of nuclear family is one which is currently floundering in failure, however.
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