1st Edition

Sibling Relationships their Nature and Significance Across the Lifespan

    416 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    First published in 1982. Since the emergence of developmental psychology early this century, theorists and researchers have emphasized the family’s role in shaping the child’s emergent social style, personality, and cognitive competence. In so doing, however, psychologists have implicitly adopted a fairly idiosyncratic definition of the family— one that focuses almost exclusively on parents and mostly on mothers. The realization that most families contain two parents and at least two children has occurred slowly, and has brought with it recognition that children develop in the context of a diverse network of social relationships within which each person may affect every other both directly (through their interactions) and indirectly (i.e., through A ’s effect on B, who in turn influences C). The family is such a social network, itself embedded in a broader network of relations with neighbors, relatives, and social institutions. Within the family, relationships among siblings have received little attention until fairly recently. In this volume, the goal is to review the existing empirical and theoretical literature concerning the nature and importance of sibling relationships.

    1 Sibling Relationships Across the Lifespan: An Overview and Introduction 2. The Effect of the Newborn on the Older Sibling: Mothers Questionnaires 3 Siblings and Their Mothers: Developing Relationships Within the Family 4 Patterns of Sibling Interaction Among Preschool-age Children 5 Sibling Relationships in Middle Childhood 6 Sibling Deidentification and Split-Parent Identification: A Family Tetrad 7 Birth Order and Sibling Stability Effects8 Life Span Personality Stability in Sibling Status 9 Important Variables in Adult Sibling Relationships: A Qualitative Study 10. Intense Sibling Loyalties 11. Sibling Influence Throughout the Lifespan 12. Only Children in America 13. Sibling Interdependence and Child Caretaking: A Cross-Cultural View 14. Sibling Relationships in Nonhuman Primates 15 Similarities and Differences between Siblings; Epilogue: Framing the Problem

    Biography

    Edited by M. E. Lamb (University of Utah), Brian Sutton-Smith (University of Pennsylvania)