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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

D.H. Lawrence's The daughter-in-law: Transforming a family system

Pages 176-182 | Received 20 Sep 2010, Accepted 25 Jan 2011, Published online: 24 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

D.H. Lawrence's play The daughter-in-law, written in 1912, explores underlying, implicit conflict within a family. Set in a small mining town in England, the family consists of Mrs. Gascoyne, her sons Luther and Joe, and her daughter-in-law, Minnie, Luther's wife. The central conflict is between Mrs. Gascoyne and Minnie, who challenges her mother-in-law's control over her sons, who also compete with each other for the love and recognition of their mother. Joe, the youngest son, perturbs the family system and acts as a mediator, functioning as a family therapist. He sets a process in motion through which the rigid family alliances are challenged and ultimately realigned. Mrs. Gascoyne's self-image as a perfect, self-sacrificing, self-righteous mother ultimately is transformed, and she accepts Minnie as a family member. Brandchaft's concept of “pathological accommodation” explicates how enmeshed family members can collide, and thereby stultify their personal development. As Joe plays his role of “family therapist,” the family dynamic changes. Through the process of rupture and repair, each family member begins to recognize the needs of the other, and thereby a path for differentiation, individuation, and autonomy becomes possible for them.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Gertrude Schwartzman

Gertrude Schwartzman has an MS in psychology and in her private practice deals with adult and couples treatment. She is a former faculty member and supervisor in the Group Therapy Department of the Training Institute for Mental Practitioners and a former lecturer at the New School University in New York City. She has published articles on film, group therapy, and assertion in women.

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