The narrative of parents

Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 26 (4):423–442 (1996)
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Abstract

A conception of parental experience is proposed to enhance the move of the study of parenting into the interpersonal realm by describing parental subjectivity from the parent's point of view. Explanations are based on that which the parent can be accountable for, on parental dialogues with observers/clinicians about their dialogues with their infants. This conception of parental subjectivity is compared with other conceptions which define parental subjectivity as the mental apparatus of the parent and not as representing the evolving relation of the parent with the infant, and with explanations which consider parental reports in terms of the parent's psychodynamics and cognitive abilities rather than in terms of the on-going dialogues between themselves and their infants. The paper introduces a typology of parental dialogues with observers/clinicians about their dialogues with their infants, within the context of the non-verbal nature of the infant's communication. The findings from empirical examinations of this typology are presented, and their implications for the proposal that the study of parental relations with their infants should consider the parent's accountability are discussed

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References found in this work

Motives and mechanisms: an introduction to the psychology of action.Rom Harré - 1985 - New York: Methuen. Edited by David D. Clarke & Nicola De Carlo.
Varieties of Positioning.Rom Harré & Luk van Langenhove - 1991 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 21 (4):393-407.

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