African American marriage in the 20th century.

Fam Process

McGuinn Hall, Boston College Graduate School of Social Work, Chestnut Hill, Boston, MA 02467, USA. elaine.pinderhughes@bc/edu

Published: December 2002

It is not possible to understand African American marriages fully without attention to the social, economic, racial, and historical factors that have stressed male-female relationships beyond those stresses experienced by majority couples. I propose that the societal projection process (Bowen, 1978) has entrapped African Americans in ways that have continually and severely strained their marital and couple relationships. These experiences, and the ways in which African Americans have responded to them, have created a vulnerability that is compounded by societal shifts and changes, and is manifest in the precipitous decline of marriages at a rate higher than that found in all other racial groups in the U.S. I will examine the state of African American marriages in this cultural context, with specific attention to the effects of the unequal sex ratio, socioeconomic conditions, and overstressed male-female relationships. I will then discuss implications and offer suggestions for therapists who work with this population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.2002.41206.xDOI Listing

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