内容简介:
"Relating Difficulty" serves as an initial attempt to understand the nature of difficulty in relationships and to place it in a broad context of human experience. It extends the discussion of the "dark side" of relationships, emphasizing the whole process of relating. As difficult people are a feature of regular experience, and difficult relationships are all too common in our everyday lives, the present volume delves fully into this area of relationship study, and moves forward the prospect that some relationships are inherently difficult, although the factors that make any kind of relationship difficult have been relatively neglected. The chapters included herein demonstrate a diverse sampling of places and ways in which difficulties are experienced in relating, and provide a certain understanding of the nature of relational difficulty, both in the abstract and in performance. The subjects covered offer a solid representation of the work in progress in the area, contributed by both senior and up-and-coming scholars. Chapters include conceptual and expirical work, and the volume concludes with a summary articulating the main points characterizing difficulty across these different relational contexts and processes.