- Relational dialectics
Relational dialectics is a concept within
communication theory . The theory, first proposed respectively by Baxter [Baxter, L. A. (1988). A dialectical perspective of communication strategies in relationship development. In S. Duck. (Ed.) Handbook of personal relationships (pp. 257-273). New York: Wiley.] and W. K. Rawlins [Rawlins, William K. (1988). "A Dialectical Analysis of the Tensions, Functions and Strategic Challenges of Communication in Young Adult Friendships,"Communication Yearbook 12, ed. James A. Anderson (Newbury, CA: Sage),157-189.] [Rawlins, William K. (1992). Friendship Matters: Communication, Dialectics, and the Life Course. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine de Gruyter.] in 1988, defines communication patterns between relationship partners as the result of endemic "dialectic al tensions". These tensions are a result of the conflicting emotional needs felt by the participants of any relationship, who experience tugs and pulls causing relationships to be in a constant state of flux. The relational dialectic leads to balancing efforts between conflicting needs within the relationship. The theory proposed that maintenance of a relationship was dependent upon the members each striving to reach an acceptable balance (happy medium) between their own desires and needs and that of others.Conflicting values
According to the original relational dialectic model, there were three core tensions (opposing values) in any relationship, these were:: Privacy vs. transparency: By the sharing of information, a relationship can grow closer and stronger. However, this need for self-disclosure conflicts with the need for privacy felt by each individual in the relationship. When these needs are at odds with one another, a relational tension is created over how much disclosure is desirable.: Novelty vs. predictability: For a relationship to be maintainable, there is a need for structure and stability. At the same time, a relationship in which nothing out of the ordinary takes place cannot stay dynamic. The struggle to avoid monotony while maintaining order is the basis for this tension.:Autonomy vs. connectedness: All humans have a need for autonomy and independence. Conversely, they wish to attach themselves to others through relationships, in which decisions are made on a group level. Tension arises here when attachment to the group encroaches on the individual member's need for self-government.
According to the theory, while most of us may embrace the ideals of closeness, certainty, and openness in our relationships, the communication is not a straight path towards these goals. Conflicts often produce the exact opposites (autonomy, novelty, and privacy). Griffin, Emory A. (2003) "A First Look at Communication Theory" McGraw Hill, Boston, ISBN 0-07-248392-X ;]
Later researchers have used other value pairs such as Certainty vs. Uncertainty, although more orthodox practitioners subsume new pairs under one of the triumvirate above.Sahlstein, Erin M. (April 2006) "Making plans: Praxis strategies for negotiating uncertainty-certainty in long-distance relationships" "Western Journal of Communication" 70.(2): pp. 147-165;]
History
Relational Dialectics is the emotional and value-based version of the philosophical
Dialectic . It is rooted in the dynamisim of theYin and Yang . Like the classic Yin and Yang, the balance of emotional values in a relationship is always in motion, and any value pushed to its extreme contains the seed of its opposite.Baxter, L. A. & Montgomery, B. M. (1996) "Relating: Dialogues and dialectics" Guilford Press, New York, ISBN 1-57230-099-X ;]In the
Western world , these ideas hark back to the Greek philosopherHeraclitus , who held that the world was in constant flux (like fire), with creative and destructive forces on both sides of every process.Mikhail Bakhtin applied Marxistdialectic to literary and rhetorical theory and criticism. He illustrated the tensions that exists in the deep structure of all human experience. . For example, he identified that the tension that exists between unity and difference. Bakhtin conceived the human dialectic as two forces analogous to the physical forces "centripetal" (emotional forces tending towards unity) and "centrifugal" (emotional forces tending towards divergence). Like the Yin and Yang, Bakhtin's forces have no ultimate resolution.Baxter took the deep structural analysis of Bakhtin and applied it to communication theory. She found a number of axes where this dynamic tension operated. Later authors have added other axes.
Core Concepts
There are four main concepts that form the backdrop of relational dialectics, they are: contradiction, totality, process, and praxis.
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