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The Search for Domestic Bliss - by Ian Dowbiggin (Hardcover)

The Search for Domestic Bliss - by  Ian Dowbiggin (Hardcover) - 1 of 1
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About this item

Highlights

  • Why are Americans so bad at marriage?
  • Author(s): Ian Dowbiggin
  • 262 Pages
  • Psychology, Psychotherapy

Description



About the Book



Dowbiggin traces the concerted and deliberate way in which the old order of looking to family and community for guidance gave way to seeking guidance from marriage and family counseling professionals and what that shift means for American families.



Book Synopsis



Why are Americans so bad at marriage? It's certainly not for lack of trying. By the early 21st century Americans were spending billions on marriage and family counseling, seeking advice and guidance from some 50,000 experts. And yet, the divorce rate suggests that all of this therapeutic intervention isn't making couples happier or marriages more durable. Quite the contrary, Ian Dowbiggin tells us in this thought-provoking book: the "caring industry" is part of the problem.

Under the influence of therapeutic reformers, marital and familial dynamics in this country have shifted from mores and commitment to love and companionship. This movement toward a "me marriage," as the New York Times has termed it, with its attendant soaring expectations and acute dissatisfactions, is rooted as much in the twists and turns of 20th-century history as it is in the realities in the hearts and minds of modern Americans, Dowbiggin argues; and his book reveals how effectively those changes have been encouraged and orchestrated by a small but resourceful group of social reformers with ties to eugenics, birth control, population control, and sex education.

In The Search for Domestic Bliss, Dowbiggin delves into the stories of the usual suspects in the founding of the therapeutic gospel, exposing little known aspects of their influence and misunderstood features of their work. Here we learn, for instance, that Betty Friedan did not after all discover "the problem that knows no name"--the widespread unhappiness of women in mid-century America; and that, like Friedan, one of the pioneers of marriage counseling was an open admirer of Stalin's Russia. The book also explores the long overlooked impact of sex researchers Alfred Kinsey and Masters and Johnson on the development of marriage and family counseling; and considers the under-appreciated contributions to the marriage counseling movement of social reformer and activist Emily Mudd..

Through these and other reform-minded Americans, Dowbiggin traces the concerted and deliberate way in which the old order of looking to family and community for guidance gave way to seeking guidance from marriage and family counseling professionals. Such a transformation, as this book makes clear, has been a key part of a major revolution in the way Americans think about their inner selves and their relations with friends, family, and community members--a revolution in which once deeply private concerns have been redefined as grave matters of public mental health.



Review Quotes




"The Search for Domestic Bliss is a long-awaited and definitive examination of the history of marriage and family counseling. In a clear and engaging style, Dowbiggin persuasively demonstrates how a small group of dedicated individuals, particularly the fascinating marriage counseling pioneer Emily Mudd, forever changed American marriage, for better or for worse."--Kristin Celello, author of Making Marriage Work: A History of Marriage and Divorce in the Twentieth-Century United States

"Here is a renowned mental health historian recounting the inspiring and sometimes troubling history of marriage counseling in North America. It turns out that our previous assumptions about the origins of couples therapy are wrong: the pioneers were mostly radicals, not conservatives, and they launched one of the great professional success stories of the last century. But professional success came with unintended side effects that we must confront if we are to serve the public good in the 21st century. A fascinating book that will change how we see ourselves as couple therapists."--William J. Doherty, Ph.D., author of Take Back Your Marriage and Soul Searching


Dimensions (Overall): 9.3 Inches (H) x 6.35 Inches (W) x .94 Inches (D)
Weight: 1.22 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Sub-Genre: Psychotherapy
Genre: Psychology
Number of Pages: 262
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Theme: Couples & Family
Format: Hardcover
Author: Ian Dowbiggin
Language: English
Street Date: January 17, 2014
TCIN: 1003270902
UPC: 9780700619474
Item Number (DPCI): 247-14-2865
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Shipping details

Estimated ship dimensions: 0.94 inches length x 6.35 inches width x 9.3 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 1.22 pounds
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