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Merger and Fusion in Lesbian Relationships

Merger and Fusion in Lesbian Relationships Abstract Discussion of the merger and fusion concepts, as applied to lesbian relationships, has primarily been in the spirit of enhancing therapists' awareness of the phenomenon, first, as a treatment focus in couples therapy and, second, as a predictable result of gender-role socialization issues and external prejudice against same-sex relationships. Nevertheless, the terms merger and fusion lack definitional specificity, and their continuing use runs the risk of confounding relational strength with dysfunction. An alternative framework is offered for conceptualizing boundary problems in lesbian couples. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Women & Therapy Taylor & Francis

Merger and Fusion in Lesbian Relationships

Women & Therapy , Volume 20 (3): 11 – Oct 17, 1997

Merger and Fusion in Lesbian Relationships

Women & Therapy , Volume 20 (3): 11 – Oct 17, 1997

Abstract

Abstract Discussion of the merger and fusion concepts, as applied to lesbian relationships, has primarily been in the spirit of enhancing therapists' awareness of the phenomenon, first, as a treatment focus in couples therapy and, second, as a predictable result of gender-role socialization issues and external prejudice against same-sex relationships. Nevertheless, the terms merger and fusion lack definitional specificity, and their continuing use runs the risk of confounding relational strength with dysfunction. An alternative framework is offered for conceptualizing boundary problems in lesbian couples.

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References (17)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1541-0315
eISSN
0270-3149
DOI
10.1300/J015v20n03_04
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract Discussion of the merger and fusion concepts, as applied to lesbian relationships, has primarily been in the spirit of enhancing therapists' awareness of the phenomenon, first, as a treatment focus in couples therapy and, second, as a predictable result of gender-role socialization issues and external prejudice against same-sex relationships. Nevertheless, the terms merger and fusion lack definitional specificity, and their continuing use runs the risk of confounding relational strength with dysfunction. An alternative framework is offered for conceptualizing boundary problems in lesbian couples.

Journal

Women & TherapyTaylor & Francis

Published: Oct 17, 1997

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