Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Disclosure process: an introduction
- 2 Patterns and functions of self-disclosure during childhood and adolescence
- 3 Intimacy and self-disclosure in friendships
- 4 Self-disclosure and the sibling relationship: what did Romulus tell Remus?
- 5 Lonely preadolescents' disclosure to familiar peers and related social perceptions
- 6 Children's disclosure of vicariously induced emotions
- 7 Moral development and children' differential disclosure to adults versus peers
- 8 Parential influences on children's willingness to disclose
- 9 Disclosure processes: issues for child sexual abuse victims
- 10 Self-disclosure in adolescents: a family systems perspective
- Author index
- Subject index
10 - Self-disclosure in adolescents: a family systems perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Disclosure process: an introduction
- 2 Patterns and functions of self-disclosure during childhood and adolescence
- 3 Intimacy and self-disclosure in friendships
- 4 Self-disclosure and the sibling relationship: what did Romulus tell Remus?
- 5 Lonely preadolescents' disclosure to familiar peers and related social perceptions
- 6 Children's disclosure of vicariously induced emotions
- 7 Moral development and children' differential disclosure to adults versus peers
- 8 Parential influences on children's willingness to disclose
- 9 Disclosure processes: issues for child sexual abuse victims
- 10 Self-disclosure in adolescents: a family systems perspective
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Contemporary clinical family therapy theory is founded upon an interactional model in which individuals are deemphasized in favor of higherorder social patterns. This paradigm, often labeled “general systems theory,” has been adopted from the physical and biological sciences and applied to an understanding of family interaction (Von Bertalanfy, 1969; Bateson, 1972).
Family systems theory and self-disclosure
From the perspective of systems theory, the family is perceived as a holistic organismic unit rather than a set of individuals (Nichols, 1984; Searight & Openlander, 1986). The interdependent elements interact in a circular rather than a linear manner (Nichols, 1984). These patterns of interaction within a system are oriented toward maintaining the homeostasis or stability of the family. Negative feedback loops are the primary mechanism for self-regulation through reduction of the effect of any change-oriented process (Jackson, 1957). This is often an adaptive process but may be maladaptive when the family's homeostasis includes a dysfunctional child or adolescent. Thus, while a symptomatic child represents systems-wide distress, the dysfunctional child simultaneously serves to maintain a particular pattern of family organization – for example, an overinvolved mother and an emotionally distant father. Positive feedback, in contrast, amplifies certain family patterns past the equilibrium point such that the family becomes reorganized (Hoffman, 1981). The goal of family therapy is to enact a positive feedback process that results in the family functioning without a symptomatic member (Hoffman, 1981).
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- Information
- Disclosure Processes in Children and Adolescents , pp. 204 - 226Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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