"Robert L. Greene has written a distinctive book about human memory. I know of nothing else quite like it....In my opinion, this book is a real winner. Certainly, psychologists studying human learning and memory will want to read it, and I suspect that it will be widely read by cognitive psychologists and often used as a textbook too. I can also recommend it for those outside cognitive psychology....In conclusion, Greene has produced a unique book about human memory. I think it is a book that researchers in this field will definitely want to own, that cognitive psychologists will want to read, and from which psychologists in many other areas could profit." —Contemporary Psychology
Theoretical and Methodological Issues: 1 Conceptual and Theoretical Perspectives on Generational Relations 2 Oedipal Conflict, Platonic Love: Centrifugal Forces in lntergenerational Relations 3 lntergenerational Research: Methodological Considerations, lnter-generational Relations and Change 4 Family and Community Networks in Appalachia 5 Asymmetrical Kin and the Problematic Son-in-Law 6 Daughters and Sons as Young Adults: Restructuring the Ties that Bind 7 Family Ties and Life Changes: Hard Times and Hard Choices in Women's Lives Since the 1930s 8 The Role of the Family in the Development of Mental Abilities: A 50-Year Study Salutogenic and Pathogenic Processes 9 lnter-generational Networks and Transmitting the Sense of Coherence 10 Reciprocal Socialization and the Care of Offspring with Cancer and Schizophrenia 11 Elder Abuse Resulting From Caregiving Overload in Older Families
Nancy Datan University of Wisconsin - Green Bay, Anita L. Greene West Virginia University, Hayne W. Reese West Virginia University