Bringing new focus to the subject, THE INVISIBLE WEB investigates the
family from a feminist perspective. Using the lens of gender,
connections between mothers and daughters, fathers and daughters,
mothers and sons, and husbands and wives are analyzed and given new
meaning. The authors evaluate and redefine family transitions such as
divorce, single-parent and female-headed households, and remarried
couples who are attempting to integrate their respective children with
ex-spouses and complicated networks of extended kin. They also reexamine
traditional and emerging roles for women in their early, middle, and
later years. Written in an engaging format, each chapter features an in
depth analysis of how gender shapes the relationship in question. This
discussion is followed by fascinating vignettes of actual cases from
each of the four authors, whose approaches reflect different
orientations to therapy.
Based on the work of the Women's Project in Family Therapy which won the
1986 AFTA Award for Distinguished Contribution to Family Therapy, this
groundbreaking work is an excellent text for courses in family therapy
and women's studies, an invaluable guide for mental health
practitioners, and an insightful read for anyone who wishes to explore
the invisible web of gender patterns in families.