Relational Transitions: The Evolution of Personal Relationships
By (Author) Richard L. Conville
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology: family and relationships
Relationships and families: advice and issues
Communication studies
302.34
Hardback
208
Richard Conville tackles the problem of how to think about the process nature of communication in personal relationships by moving beyond stage models of relational development and proposing a helical model which depicts a four-phase strucutre of transition between relational stages. The model is based on "Difference" developed as a theoretical concept, and on the structural analysis of relational partners' narratives of their transition experiences. Conville's perspective offers both a conceptual and a methodological alternative to current work in relationship development. Though its focus is ostensibly a narrow slice of the human communication field, its principles can be applied to other communications contexts successfully. In his opening chapters, Conville describes "Difference", a necessary component of current theorizing in interpersonal relationships, and its role in the structure of relationships to locate dialectical differences involving time, intimacy and affect. Later chapters examine relationships' four transition phases: security, disintegration, alienation, and resynthesis. Relational Transitions will provide particularly useful to scholars and students of communication, psychology, and sociology.
RICHARD L. CONVILLE is Professor of Speech Communication at the University of Southern Mississippi. He has taught in the field of interpersonal communication since 1972, and his research has appeared in journals such as Human Communication Research, the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, the Quarterly Journal of Speech, and Communication Monographs. Professor Conville has served on the Board of Directors of the International Communication Association and on the editorial boards of the Southern Communication Journal and Communication Theory.