Overview
- Editors:
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John Eckenrode
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Cornell University, Ithaca, USA
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About this book
I am very pleased to have been asked to do abrief foreword to this second CRISP volume, The Social Context o[ Coping. I know most of the participants and their work, and respect them as first-rate and influen tial research scholars whose research is at the cusp of current concerns in the field of stress and coping. Psychological stress is central to human adaptation. It is difficult to visualize the study of adaptation, health, illness, personal soundness, and psychopathology without recognizing their dependence on how weil people cope with the stresses of living. Since the editor, John Eckenrode, has portrayed the themes of each of the chapters in his introduction, I can limit myself to a few general comments about stress and coping. Stress research began, as unexplored fields often do, with very sim ple-should I say simplistic?-ideas about how to define the concept. Early approaches were unidimensional and input-output in outlook, modeled implicitly on Hooke's late-17th-century engineering analysis in which external load was an environmental stressor, stress was the area over wh ich the load acted, and strain was the deformation of the struc tu re such as a bridge or building.
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Table of contents (12 chapters)
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- Elaine Wethington, Ronald C. Kessler
Pages 13-29
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- Carol S. Aneshensel, Susan Gore
Pages 55-77
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- Karen Rook, David Dooley, Ralph Catalano
Pages 79-105
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- Susan Gore, Mary Ellen Colten
Pages 139-163
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- Benjamin H. Gottlieb, Fred Wagner
Pages 165-188
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- Mary Amanda Dew, Evelyn J. Bromet
Pages 189-211
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- Susan Folkman, Margaret Chesney, Leon McKusick, Gail Ironson, David S. Johnson, Thomas J. Coates
Pages 239-260
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Back Matter
Pages 277-285
Editors and Affiliations
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Cornell University, Ithaca, USA
John Eckenrode