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Intimate Violence Across the Lifespan electronic resource Interpersonal, Familial, and Cross-Generational Perspectives / by Tova Band-Winterstein, Zvi Eisikovits.

By: Band-Winterstein, Tova [author.]Contributor(s): Eisikovits, Zvi [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: The Springer Series on Human ExceptionalityPublication details: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XII, 137 p. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781493913541Subject(s): Philosophy (General) | Geriatrics | Public health | social work | Applied psychology | Consciousness | psychology | Personality and Social Psychology | Geriatrics/Gerontology | Family | Social Work | Psychotherapy and Counseling | Public HealthDDC classification: 155.2 | 302 LOC classification: HM1001-1281Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Being in an “As-If” Reality -- Chapter 3: “Carrying the Load Throughout the Journey” -- Chapter 4: The Rebirth of Meaning -- Chapter 5: Epilogue -- Chapter 6: Where do we go from here?.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Studies of family functioning as their members age, and of elder abuse at the hands of adult children or caregivers, are recent trends in gerontology. Yet the intersection of these two ideas—the impact of prolonged domestic abuse on elders and their families—has received scant notice. Similarly, questions are posed as to whether abusers "age out" of violence, but answers have been inconclusive. Intimate Violence across the Lifespan addresses these research gaps with a groundbreaking long-term study of why domestic abuse persists, why it replicates, how abusive relationships may be altered by the processes of aging, and how violence may be stopped. The authors' phenomenological approach to their subject makes extensive use of interviews with family members to present a detailed portrait of family violence and the changing dimensions of control and secrecy as abuser and victim age. Close attention is especially paid to the frequently marginalized experiences of adult children, and how these scenarios play out as they become partners and parents. The section on intervention depicts the multiple challenges of working with husbands, wives, and children, with guidelines for encouraging change, closure, and support. Included in the coverage: Hiding as a way of life. Cumulative losses and loss of meaning. Giving meaning to life in violence. The family's summary of its journey in violence. The tension between continuity and change. Intervention: making resilience and survival possible. Intimate Violence across the Lifespan is an essential resource for researchers, graduate students, and clinicians/professionals in varied fields, including gerontology, family, psychotherapy/counseling, social work, personality and social psychology, and public health.
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Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Being in an “As-If” Reality -- Chapter 3: “Carrying the Load Throughout the Journey” -- Chapter 4: The Rebirth of Meaning -- Chapter 5: Epilogue -- Chapter 6: Where do we go from here?.

Studies of family functioning as their members age, and of elder abuse at the hands of adult children or caregivers, are recent trends in gerontology. Yet the intersection of these two ideas—the impact of prolonged domestic abuse on elders and their families—has received scant notice. Similarly, questions are posed as to whether abusers "age out" of violence, but answers have been inconclusive. Intimate Violence across the Lifespan addresses these research gaps with a groundbreaking long-term study of why domestic abuse persists, why it replicates, how abusive relationships may be altered by the processes of aging, and how violence may be stopped. The authors' phenomenological approach to their subject makes extensive use of interviews with family members to present a detailed portrait of family violence and the changing dimensions of control and secrecy as abuser and victim age. Close attention is especially paid to the frequently marginalized experiences of adult children, and how these scenarios play out as they become partners and parents. The section on intervention depicts the multiple challenges of working with husbands, wives, and children, with guidelines for encouraging change, closure, and support. Included in the coverage: Hiding as a way of life. Cumulative losses and loss of meaning. Giving meaning to life in violence. The family's summary of its journey in violence. The tension between continuity and change. Intervention: making resilience and survival possible. Intimate Violence across the Lifespan is an essential resource for researchers, graduate students, and clinicians/professionals in varied fields, including gerontology, family, psychotherapy/counseling, social work, personality and social psychology, and public health.

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