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Effect of Multigenerational Family and Social Systems on Meaning-Making. Edition No. 1

VDM Publishing House, Jan 2010, Pages: 152


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This book explores 1) the history of motherhood from mythology through development of Western religions. 2) the acceptable social meaning of motherhood vs. actual meaning of the average rural wife/mother, and 3) the psychological implications of untimely death on future generation’s fertility. The hypothesis: negative meaning of motherhood developed as a result of premature death, secondary loss, and unresolved grief; such meaning was further impacted by the social systems of the time, i.e., religious, economic, educational, legal and political; and ultimately affected the author’s fertility and inability to carry a pregnancy full-term. The study concludes that the evolving negative family meaning of motherhood tacitly influenced four failed pregnancies, and validates Bowen’s perspective that the level of human reactivity is a product of evolutionary development, endless struggles of individuals to survive and mate, and experiences within extended family that are then transmitted through a family projection process (M. Kerr, 1988).



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