Originally published in 1987, Accounting for Relationships is an authoritative collection which brings together work by international scholars involved with research on personal relationships. It was the first study to concentrate on people's 'accounting' for their relationships.
Originally published in 1987, Accounting for Relationships, which brought together work by the leading international scholars in the expanding field of personal relationships research at the time, was the first to concentrate entirely on people's accounting for their relationships. It represented a significant move away from the analysis of personal relationships through events and actions on which research had thus far been concentrated, focusing instead on our explanations, interpretations, understanding and conceptions of our relationships.
The underlying theme which runs through this collection is that we actually create the experience and reality of our relationships by our accounts of them, and the ‘accounting’ concept links together chapters covering a variety of topics and ranging from research reports to theoretical discussions. The editors have divided the book into three sections. The essays in the first section concentrate on the individual's ‘inner world’ and the psychological processes which underlie his or her understanding and knowledge of a relationship. In the second section the focus is on a more public or expressed level, linking accounts to action, communication and social goals. The third section widens the scope still further, dealing with social and historical origins of collective sense-making, and looking at the extent to which the meaning of a relationship is created independently of the individuals concerned.
This collection at once moved the investigation of personal relationships forward by focusing on an aspect which deserved to be given more central importance, and, with respect to social psychology in general, advanced a growing intellectual movement away from individualism towards a relational perspective. Today it can be read in its historical context.
Acknowledgements. Notes on Contributors. Introduction Rosalie Burnett
Section One Interpersonal Understanding: Emotion, Construal and Reflection
1. Emotion, Decision and the Long-Term Course of Relationships David D.
Clarke
2. Emotions and Understanding Persons Frances M. Berenson
3.
Explorations of Self and Other in a Developing Relationship Sue Wilkinson
4.
Remembering Relationship Development: Constructing a Context for Interactions
Dorothy Miell
5. Reflection in Personal Relationships Rosalie Burnett Section
Two Accounting in Use: Functions, Action and Communication
6. Performed and
Unperformable: A Guide to Accounts of Relationships Charles Antaki
7. The
Nature and Motivations of Accounts for Failed Relationships Ann L. Weber,
John H. Harvey and Melinda A. Stanley
8. Friendship Expectations John J. La
Gaipa
9. Planning and Scheming: Strategies for Initiating Relationships
Charles R. Berger
10. Interplay Between Relational Knowledge and Events Sally
Planalp
11. Cognition and Communication in the Relationship Process Leslie A.
Baxter Section Three Constructing Relationships: Representation, Reality
and Rhetoric
12. Adding Apples and Oranges: Investigators Implicit Theories
About Personal Relationships Steve Duck
13. The Social Construction of an
Us: Problems of Accountability and Narratology John Shotter
14. The
Representation of Personal Relationships in Television Drama: Realism,
Convention and Morality Sonia M. Livingstone
15. Narratives of Relationship
Kenneth J. Gergen and Mary M. Gergen
16. From Self-Reports to Narrative
Discourse: Reconstructing the Voice of Experience in Personal Relationship
Research Patrick McGhee. Endpiece Rosalie Burnett. Postword: The Idea of the
Account and Future Research Patrick McGhee. Name Index. Subject Index.
Dr Rosalie Burnett is a semi-retired Research Associate, formerly Reader in Criminology, at the Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford, which she joined in 1990 after gaining her doctorate at Oxford (DPhil in Social Psychology). Before then she was a Probation Officer. Her specialist research subjects during her career have included personal relationships; rehabilitation and desistance from crime; and miscarriages of justice.
Professor Patrick McGhee is a CBT therapist, psychologist and UK National Teaching Fellow and currently Professor of Psychology and Assistant Vice Chancellor at the University of Greater Manchester. In 2017 he was a Visiting Fellow/Scholar at the universities of Cornell, Yale and MIT in the USA and has been an occasional columnist for the Guardian, the BBC and the Times Higher. Amongst other publications, he is the author of Thinking Psychologically and The Academic Quality Handbook. His current research interests include dispositional contempt, AI in psychotherapy and relationship personalities.
David Clarke is Emeritus Professor of Psychology, and former Head of School, at the University of Nottingham, UK. He holds doctorates from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge and has taught at both. Having started his career in medical sciences, he mainly researches pathways into and out of dangerous situations including road traffic collisions, evacuations, fights, relationship breakdowns, and mental disorders. He is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society, and a Chartered Psychologist.