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Chapter 11—Relational Dialectics Theory
Much of this chapter has been retooled. If you have used previous editions of the book, the new treatment likely warrants a careful re-reading. While the core material is the same, the authors have moved away from some of the distinctive language Baxter utilizes from Bakhtin in order to present a more accessible version of RDT 2.0. They’ve eliminated the terminology of diachronic or synchronic strategies to reposition the focus on the difference in functional outcome (separation or interplay) instead of synchronistic time elements. They have also changed the ethical reflection to Martin Buber’s dialogic ethics, a natural fit with the material.
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Resources
by Type
Instructors can get
additional resources.
Read more
New to Theory
Resources?
Find out more
in this short
video overview
(3:01).
From the Instructors Manual, with additional notes from the authors
List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details
Chapter 11—Relational Dialectics Theory
Much of this chapter has been retooled. If you have used previous editions of the book, the new treatment likely warrants a careful re-reading. While the core material is the same, the authors have moved away from some of the distinctive language Baxter utilizes from Bakhtin in order to present a more accessible version of RDT 2.0. They’ve eliminated the terminology of diachronic or synchronic strategies to reposition the focus on the difference in functional outcome (separation or interplay) instead of synchronistic time elements. They have also changed the ethical reflection to Martin Buber’s dialogic ethics, a natural fit with the material.
You can access Changes for a particular chapter in several ways:
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