The Reconstituted Family: A Study of Remarried Couples and Their ChildrenNelson-Hall, 1975 - 181 من الصفحات This study of remarried men and women who have children from previous marriages arose out of personal interest and experience. Not every facet can be covered in any one study. I have tried to deal with what I consider to be the most important aspects of the reconstituted family. Some of the information came from people I interviewed; some came from insights I gained beyond the answers to my straightforward questions. Information also came from my own life experience and from informal observations. I have tried to put the information from these sources together in a coherent manner as to present a picture of how remarried people and their children constitute (or fail to constitute) a family. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 7
الصفحة xiii
... vorced . In 1960 I married a man who had four children . His two oldest children were boys aged fourteen and twelve ; his daughters were ten and nine . My own children at the time of the remarriage were aged sixteen , thirteen , and ...
... vorced . In 1960 I married a man who had four children . His two oldest children were boys aged fourteen and twelve ; his daughters were ten and nine . My own children at the time of the remarriage were aged sixteen , thirteen , and ...
الصفحة 2
... vorced men for every 1,000 men living with their wives ; by 1970 this ratio had increased to 35 per 1,000 . There were 42 di- vorced women to every 1,000 women living with their hus- bands in 1960 , compared to a ratio of 60 per 1,000 ...
... vorced men for every 1,000 men living with their wives ; by 1970 this ratio had increased to 35 per 1,000 . There were 42 di- vorced women to every 1,000 women living with their hus- bands in 1960 , compared to a ratio of 60 per 1,000 ...
الصفحة 3
... vorced . Clergymen were disinclined to perform remarriage ceremonies ; laws were passed which were intended to dis- courage such unions . Today the views toward remarriage are changing in response to life in a highly mobile , urbanized ...
... vorced . Clergymen were disinclined to perform remarriage ceremonies ; laws were passed which were intended to dis- courage such unions . Today the views toward remarriage are changing in response to life in a highly mobile , urbanized ...
المحتوى
The special problems of the reconstituted | 1 |
Description of the sample | 9 |
Family integration and demographic | 20 |
حقوق النشر | |
10 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
affect American family attitudes Catholic child children from former children living daughter difference divorced educational level ex-spouses ex-wife expected factor family integration father findings former marriages former spouses Free Press friends Gerhard Lenski higher husbands and wives Husbands Wives HWRS ideal type Interreligious Marriages Jessie Bernard kids length of previous less indifference Loren E Low Moderate High marital relationship mother never been married Note nuclear family number percent number older outsiders parents percent number percent Poor Good Excellent present marriage Previous marital status previous marriage primary families primary group problems Protestants reconstituted family relations religion religious remarried couples riage role sample second marriage seemed self-ratings sets of children siblings social class society Sociological step stepchild stepchildren stepfathers stepmother stepparent-stepchild relationship stepparents stepsibling relationship subjects TABLE things tion unaffiliated upper middle class variables vorced widowed wife wife's women York younger