• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: How to Deal With Moral Tales: Constructions and Strategies of Single-Parent Families
  • Contributor: Zartler, Ulrike
  • Published: The National Council on Family Relations, 2014
  • Published in: Journal of Marriage and Family, 76 (2014) 3, Seite 604-619
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0022-2445; 1741-3737
  • Keywords: Of General Interest
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: This study explored how normative understandings based on the nuclear family ideology are linked to constructions of single-parent families and sheds light on the strategies single parents and their children adopt in dealing with negative accounts. Guided by social constructionist and configurational approaches, the in-depth analysis is based on an Austrian qualitative study, comprising interviews with 50 ten-year-old children and their 71 parents, living in nuclear, reconstituted, and single-parent families. The results showed that single-parent families are constructed predominantly in terms of deficits and disadvantages, with the nuclear family serving as an ideological code along the dimensions of normalcy, complementarity, and stability. To deal with negative accounts, single parents and their children use three basic types of strategy: (a) imitation, (b) compensation, and (c) delimitation.