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Marital and Partnership Communication

Explore the impact of gender on communication within marriages and partnerships, shedding light on how men and women differ in their verbal and nonverbal interactions. Discover how societal expectations influence language, gestures, emotions, and marital conflict resolution.

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Marital and Partnership Communication

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  1. Marital and Partnership Communication Chapter 13

  2. Gender Differences in Communication • Some scholars believe that men and women come from different “cultures” • This would explain differences in communication styles between men and women

  3. Sex and Gender • Sex • Biological classification of a male or female • Gender • Socially prescribed expectations for roles of people of a particular sex • Masculine Traits • Traditionally male stereotypes such as strength and aggression • Feminine Traits • Traditionally female stereotypes such as nurturing and emotion • Androgynous Traits • Some combination of masculine and feminine traits

  4. Gender and Nonverbal Communication • Research indicates that there are differences in communication styles between men and women • However, there are also cultural, contextual, and individual differences in communication styles as well

  5. Space and Touch • Women tend to exhibit more immediacy behaviors than men • Women are more likely to exchange affectionate touches than are men • Men use fewer touches during interaction with men than do women in • interaction with women

  6. Space and Touch continued • Men tend to use space and touch to assume positions of authority—and this finding is seen in different cultures, too • Men tend to take up more physical space than do women by sprawling out when seated or moving around when standing

  7. Facial expressions • Women tend to be more expressive than men and better at decoding facial expressions in others • Gender influences which expressions we show and which expressions we perceive: • Men show more anger, contempt, disgust, and pride • Women show more happiness, shame, fear, sadness, and embarrassment

  8. Facial expressions continued • Women smile more than men do in many social situations • There is more social pressure to smile on women than there is on men • Women are more likely to smile strategically while men are more likely to smile to express positive emotions

  9. Voice and Gesture • We can distinguish male and female voices in most cases, even when people whisper • Men tend to gesture in more expansive and relaxed postures compared to women

  10. Gender and Language • Feminine speech… • …establishes equality between people • …show support for others • …attends to the emotional and relational meaning of communication • …engages in conversational maintenance work • …is personal and concrete • …is tentative

  11. Gender and Language • Masculine speech… • …seeks to establish status and control • …pursues instrumental objectives • …aims for conversational command • …is direct and assertive • …is abstract • …is less emotionally responsive

  12. Language Features of Female Communication

  13. Language Features of Female Communication

  14. Language Features of Male Communication

  15. Marital Communication

  16. Selecting a Partner • Teen marriages fail at a higher rate than do marriages of people in their 20s or 30s • Similar values, backgrounds, and life goals are correlated with marital success • Women are more likely to marry if they do not become single parents prior to marriage • Higher education is associated with marital stability

  17. Selecting a Partner, continued • Cohabitation prior to marriage is not associated with marital success • Married sex tends to be more satisfying than single sex

  18. Issues that lower the divorce rate: • First marriage • Higher education (college and above) • Married in 20s or 30s (not teens) • Not lived with many partners prior to marriage • Religious convictions

  19. Marriage and Partnership • Marriage is a legal, lasting union that is created in a public ritual • Weddings are the ritual events that create a marriage • Weddings involve a community of people • Weddings involve rituals, which are traditional events with great significance to the participants

  20. Marital Communication • Fitzpatrick’s Marital Typology • Marriages differ in terms of: Partner Roles: conventional v. nonconventional Connectedness: interdependent v. autonomous Conflict Behavior: engage v. avoid

  21. Marital Communication Fitzpatrick’s Marriage Types • Traditionals- conventional ideological values, have high degree of interdependence, share information and intimacy and do not avoid conflict. • Independents- non-conventional ideological values, high level of companionship and sharing, psychologically close but autonomous in activities and space. • Separates- profess traditional values but place higher degree on autonomy, less companionship and sharing, maintain psychological and physical distance, avoid conflict.

  22. Marriage Types & Ideology

  23. Marital Conflict Gottman’s Theory of Marital Ecology • Marital Conflict Styles • Damaging Forms of Communication • Breaking the Cycle

  24. Research Results • Gottman and his teams can predict with 96% accuracy whether a couple will be together in three years based on observing 45 minutes of interaction • 15 minutes neutral • 15 minutes positive • 15 minutes negative • Five basic marital types in terms of conflict resolution behaviors • Two types are unstable and will lead to dissolution • Three of the types are stable

  25. Theory of Marital Ecology • Stable Marital Conflict Styles – Couples adopt an emotional-communicative style for dealing with conflict: • Validating – openly address conflict, share differences calmly and respectfully, listen attentively, empathize and compromise. • Volatile –frequent and intense conflict, hostile, listen poorly, argue fiercely, rarely empathize. One wins, one looses. • Avoiding –minimize disagreement, repress or deny conflict, rarely engage, agree to disagree.

  26. Marital Ecology • Gottman’s research shows that no one stable style is better than another for marital success • Overall emotional quality of interaction which is predictive of harmony • Benchmark is 5:1 ratio of positive to negative exchanges (yet not all forms of negative communication are equal).

  27. Damaging Forms of Negativity • The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse • Criticism (v. complaint) • Contempt • Defensiveness • Stonewalling

  28. Criticism • Refers to attacking a spouse’s personality or character • Includes three types • Passing judgment • Bringing in long lists of complaints • Indicating lack of trust in a spouse

  29. Contempt • Refers to the practice of partners insulting one another • Globalization of criticism statements • Includes • Name calling • Insults • Hostile humor • Mockery

  30. What is OK? • Complaining is OK • A Complaint is a specific statement of displeasure directed at a specific action or event • A Criticism is much less specific and has blaming language in it • A Contempt statement involves language that is intended to insult and psychologically abuse the other

  31. Defensiveness • Occurs when neither partner takes responsibility for their behaviors • Occurs when one perceives or anticipates a threat to face or relational definition by the other • Includes • Making excuses • Cross-complaining • Whining

  32. Stonewalling • Occurs when the communication between the partners has broken down • Men are more likely to stonewall and women are more likely to respond defensively

  33. Breaking the Negative Cycle • Take a break (20 minutes) • Learn to Calm Yourself • understand the danger of emotional flooding • Become Non-defensive • learn to respond non-defensively and to minimize defensiveness in others with your messages • Validate • you can acknowledge the other’s perceptions or feelings without agreeing with them • Over-learn the Strategies

  34. Domestic Violence

  35. Domestic Violence • IS violence • More than four million incidents against women each year

  36. Types of Domestic Violence • Physical Battering • Slapping, hitting, choking, punching, kicking, and using objects as weapons • Sexual Abuse • Forced sexual activities • Psychological Violence • Threats, isolation, extreme jealousy, degradation, threats to children, symbolic violence • Property Violence • Threatened or actual destruction of property

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