Abstract

This essay relates communication and the social construction of reality in marriage to historical changes in American culture. It argues that two evolving characteristics of American culture - degree of plurality and sex-role asymmetries (differentiated life worlds versus undifferentiated life worlds and equality versus paternalism) - created distinct eras in American society in which communication in marriage had different unintended consequences. It argues that this theory of the interplay between culture, history, and interpersonal communication provides a basis for the exploration of present-day intercultural differences in interpersonal communication and suggests a need to historically situate research in interpersonal communication.

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