An Intergenerational Exploration of Discipline, Attachment, and Black Mother-Daughter Relationships Across the Lifespan.

IF 2.5 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Seanna Leath, Lamont Bryant, Khrystal Johnson, Jessica Bernice Pitts, Titilope Omole, Sheretta T Butler-Barnes
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Abstract

Discipline is a significant predictor of parent-child attachment and relationship quality across the lifespan. Yet, much of the research on Black families' disciplinary strategies uses a deficit and myopic lens that focuses on punitive punishment styles (e.g., spanking or taking away privileges). In the current exploratory qualitative study, we used an intergenerational narrative lens and thematic analysis to explore semi-structured interview data from 31 Black mothers (25-60 years, Mage = 46) in the United States around their mothers' disciplinary practices during their childhood. We explored the connections that Black adult daughters made between their childhood disciplinary practices and their current disciplinary practices with their children, as well as their current relationships with their mothers. Adult daughters varied widely in their retrospective accounts of their mothers' disciplinary strategies, which we categorized into three themes: (a) punitive, (b) logical, and (c) natural. We also identified three themes around how their mothers' practices informed their current disciplinary practices with their own children: namely, (d) continuity, (e) mix, and (f) shift. Finally, we identified three themes around the current nature of their mother-daughter relationships: (g) strained, (h) progressing, and (i) healthy. The results highlighted the personal and cultural factors that informed Black women's disciplinary strategies across two generations of mothers and revealed that when adult daughters shifted away from what they experienced during childhood-it was often towards less punitive strategies. Our exploratory findings also pointed to patterns regarding the extent to which Black adult daughters felt connected, validated, and supported by their mothers. The findings lend insight into Black mother-daughter relationship dynamics, particularly around the importance of communication patterns and emotional connection in the culture of discipline within families.

纪律、依恋和黑人母女关系的代际探索。
纪律是一生中亲子依恋和关系质量的重要预测因子。然而,许多关于黑人家庭纪律策略的研究使用了一种缺陷和短视的视角,主要关注惩罚性的惩罚方式(例如,打屁股或剥夺特权)。在目前的探索性质的研究中,我们使用代际叙事镜头和主题分析来探索美国31名黑人母亲(25-60岁,Mage = 46)的半结构化访谈数据,内容涉及其母亲童年时期的纪律实践。我们探索了黑人成年女儿在她们童年时期的纪律实践和她们现在对孩子的纪律实践之间的联系,以及她们现在与母亲的关系。成年女儿对母亲管教策略的回顾性描述差异很大,我们将其分为三个主题:(a)惩罚性的,(b)逻辑的,(c)自然的。我们还确定了三个主题,围绕母亲的实践如何影响他们目前对自己孩子的纪律实践:即(d)连续性,(e)混合和(f)转移。最后,我们围绕母女关系的当前性质确定了三个主题:(g)紧张,(h)进展,(i)健康。研究结果强调了个人和文化因素,这些因素影响了两代黑人母亲对黑人女性的管教策略,并揭示了当成年女儿从童年经历中解脱出来时,她们往往会采取不那么严厉的策略。我们的探索性发现还指出了黑人成年女儿在多大程度上感受到与母亲的联系、认可和支持。这些发现有助于深入了解黑人母女关系的动态,特别是在家庭纪律文化中沟通模式和情感联系的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Behavioral Sciences
Behavioral Sciences Social Sciences-Development
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
429
审稿时长
11 weeks
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