Fathers' Early Emotion Talk: Associations With Income, Ethnicity, and Family Factors.

Journal Name
Journal of Marriage and Family
Journal Volume
73
Journal Issue
2
Page Count
18
Year Published
2011
Author (Individual)
Garrett-Peters, Patricia.
Mills-Koonce, Roger.
Zerwas, Stephanie.
Cox, Martha.
Vernon-Feagans, Lynne.
Resource Type
Journal Article
Resource Format
Unbound
Resource Language
English
Contextual, mother-, child-, and father-level variables were examined in association with fathers' emotion talk to infants during a shared picture book activity, in an ethnically diverse, low-income sample (N = 549). Significant main effects included the rate of emotion talk from fathers' romantic partners (i.e., the infant's mother), infant attention and distress, and sensitive parenting. Significant interactions were also found. Higher income African American fathers referred to negative emotions more than non-African American higher income fathers. In addition, African American fathers who demonstrated more negative and intrusive parenting referred to positive emotions more than non-African American fathers who demonstrated negative and intrusive parenting. Our findings support family systems theory and, specifically, the interdependence of individuals' behaviors within the family unit. Interaction effects are discussed with respect to cultural variation in beliefs about parenting behaviors and the cultural experience of African Americans, including the Black cultural experience and the minority experience. (Author abstract)

Do you have something you think is appropriate for the library? Submit Library Resources.

bot icon
  • Current: Step 1/3
  • Step 2/3
  • Step 3/3
Was this page helpful