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Bowen Theory's Secrets: Revealing the Hidden Life of Families
Contributor(s): Kerr, Michael E. (Author)
ISBN: 0393708128     ISBN-13: 9780393708127
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
OUR PRICE:   $42.75  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: February 2019
* Not available - Not in print at this time *
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Psychotherapy - Couples & Family
Dewey: 616.891
LCCN: 2018028077
Physical Information: 1.2" H x 6.3" W x 9.5" (1.80 lbs) 408 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Murray Bowen (1931-1990) was the first to study the family in a live-in setting and describe specific details about how families function as systems. Despite Bowen theory being based on research begun more than seventy years ago, the value of viewing human beings as profoundly emotionally-driven creatures and human families functioning as emotional units is more relevant than ever. This book, written by one of his closest collaborators, updates his still-radical theory with the latest approaches to understanding emotional development.

Reduced to its most fundamental level, Bowen theory explains how people begin a relationship very close emotionally but become more distant over time. The ideas also help explain why good people do bad things, and bad people do good things, and how family life strengthens some members while weakening others. Gaining knowledge about previously unseen specifics of family interactions reveals a hidden life of families. The hidden life explains how the best of intentions can fail to produce the desired result, thus providing a blueprint for change.

Part I of the book explains the core ideas in the theory. Part II describes the process of differentiation of self, which is the most important application of Bowen theory. People sometimes think of theories as ivory tower productions: interesting, but not necessarily practical. Differentiation of self is anything but; it has a well-tested real-world application. Part II includes four long case presentations of families in the public eye. They help illustrate how Bowen theory can help explain how families--three of which appear fairly normal and one which does not--unwittingly produce an offspring that chronically manifests some time of severely aberrant behavior.

Finally, the book proposes a new unidisease concept--the idea that a wide range of diseases have a number of physiological processes in common. In an Epilogue, Kerr applies Bowen theory to his family to illustrate how changes in a family relationship system over time can better explain the clinical course of a chronic illness than the diagnosis itself.

With close to four thousand hours of therapy conducted with about thirty-five hundred families over decades, Michael Kerr is an expert guide to the ins and outs of this most influential way of approaching clinical work with families.


Contributor Bio(s): Kerr, Michael E.: - Michael E. Kerr, MD, succeeded Murray Bowen as director of the Georgetown Family Center. He is coauthor with Bowen of Family Evaluation (Norton) and lives in Islesboro, Maine.