ABSTRACT

Father-son relationships can be notoriously difficult. Often fractious, sometimes hostile, and occasionally destructive, the issue of authority is negotiated by fathers and sons in a range of styles. In this fascinating new book, John Crosby describes the filial relationships of 20 historical figures to illustrate the different ways they related to their fathers, and what this can tell us about love, authority and the wider family context.

Sons and Fathers is an approach to understanding this son-father conflict based on early life experience rather than upon psycho-historian or psycho-biographical material and theorizing. Each vignette is designed to be read as a biographical account, but is bookended by a section reflecting on how each man’s relationship to his father can be understood in the context of key developmental theories, in particular those of Eric Erikson and Murray Bowen’s family system theory. The book also includes an extended introduction to both theorists for those unfamiliar with their work, as well as a discussion of the role of corporal punishment as a method of disciplining children.

From Michael Jackson to Bing Crosby, Joseph Stalin to John F Kennedy, this is a uniquely accessible but insightful book that will appeal to both general readers as well as students of Developmental Psychology across the lifespan, Family Studies, Marriage and Family therapy, and related subjects. It will also appeal to professionals working in the area, including social workers, counsellors and therapists.

part 1|15 pages

Background and Foreground

part 2|35 pages

Father absent

part 1|31 pages

Father present

chapter 8|7 pages

Charles Darwin and Robert Darwin

chapter 9|7 pages

Ninefranz Kafka and Hermann Kafka

chapter 10|7 pages

Benjamin Franklin and Josiah Franklin

chapter 11|8 pages

Sigmund Freud and Jakob Freud

part 2|16 pages

Father present yet distant

chapter 12|7 pages

Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Lincoln

chapter 13|7 pages

Ulysses S. Grant and Jesse Grant

part 1|29 pages

Father present yet distant with abuse

chapter 14|7 pages

Pat Conroy and Colonel Don Conroy

chapter 16|7 pages

Adolph Hitler and Alois Hitler

chapter 17|7 pages

Joseph Stalin and Vissarion Dzhugashvili

part 1|22 pages

Father present with commercial and/or political intent

chapter 18|6 pages

Amadeus Mozart and Leopold Mozart

chapter 19|7 pages

Ludwig Van Beethoven and Johann Beethoven

chapter 20|7 pages

John F. Kennedy and Joseph P. Kennedy

part 1|9 pages

Father present with abuse and commercial intent

chapter 21|7 pages

Michael Jackson and Joseph Jackson

part 1|9 pages

Three present fathers

part 1|11 pages

Conclusions

chapter 23|9 pages

Conclusions