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Journal articles on the topic 'Father-daughter relationship'

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1

Tang, Wanwen. "The Influence of Father-daughter Relationship on Adolescent Daughters Development." Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media 5, no. 1 (May 17, 2023): 276–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.54254/2753-7048/5/20220529.

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With the development of society, the importance of the father-daughter relationship in the family has become increasingly apparent and has attracted much attention from academia and industry. Based on the influence of the father-daughter relationship on the development of daughters in all aspects, this paper first conducted an extensive search and collation of relevant theories and studied the influence of the father-daughter relationship on the physical development, psychological quality, and academic development of daughters. According to these researches, it can be concluded that the father-daughter relationship has a great influence on all aspects of the daughter, and a good father-daughter relationship can bring a very positive influence to the daughter.
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Byrd-Craven, Jennifer, Brandon J. Auer, Douglas A. Granger, and Amber R. Massey. "The father–daughter dance: The relationship between father–daughter relationship quality and daughters' stress response." Journal of Family Psychology 26, no. 1 (February 2012): 87–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0026588.

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3

Brown, Jennie, Laura A. Thompson, and David Trafimow. "The Father-Daughter Relationship Rating Scale." Psychological Reports 90, no. 1 (February 2002): 212–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.2002.90.1.212.

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4

Park, Jeongjae. "The Father-Daughter Relationship in Pericles." Modern Studies in English Language & Literature 62, no. 1 (February 28, 2018): 21–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.17754/mesk.62.1.21.

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Park, Jeongjae. "The Father-Daughter Relationship in Tempest." Modern Studies in English Language & Literature 63, no. 2 (May 31, 2019): 59–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.17754/mesk.63.2.59.

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6

Zhang, Bingzheng, Ting Yu, Qiuxing Chen, Kaye Wellings, Theresa M. Oniffrey, Junrui Ma, Limin Huang, et al. "Early menarche and its relationship to paternal migrant work among middle-school-aged students in China." Journal of Biosocial Science 52, no. 1 (May 21, 2019): 108–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021932019000300.

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AbstractAssociations have been shown between father’s absence and menarcheal age, but most studies have focused on absence resulting from divorce, abandonment or death. Little research has been conducted to evaluate the effect on menarcheal age of paternal absence through migrant work. In a sample of 400 middle school students, this study examined the association between paternal migrant work and menarcheal age against a backdrop of extensive rural-to-urban migration in China. Data were collected through a self-reported questionnaire, including social-demographic characteristics, aspects of family relationships, information about father’s migrant work and age at menarche. After adjusting for BMI, parent marital status and perceived relationship with mother, lower self-perceived quality of father–daughter relationship (both ‘father present, relationship poor’ and ‘father absent, relationship poor’) and lower frequency of contact with the father were associated with higher odds for early menarche. These findings suggest that the assumption that father’s absence for work influences the timing of menarche needs to be examined in the context of the quality of the father–daughter relationship and paternal care, which appear to play a critical role in the timing of menarche. These findings also emphasize the importance of enhancing paternal involvement and improving father–daughter relationships in the development of appropriate reproductive strategy in daughters.
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Jianbo, Deng, Arbaayah Ali Termizi, and Manimangai Mani. "THE FATHER-DAUGHTER RELATIONSHIP IN SHAKESPEARE’S KING LEAR FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF BOWEN FAMILY SYSTEMS THEORY." Journal of Language and Communication 10, no. 2 (September 15, 2023): 183–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.47836/jlc.10.02.03.

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King Lear is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare, describing a father’s sorrow over his daughters’ unfilial or disobedient behavior. Although the father-daughter relationship in the play is often studied, to date, this relationship has not been investigated from the perspective of the Bowen family systems theory. Thus, the present study adopts the new interdisciplinary research method, the Bowen theory, to interpret the father-daughter relationship in King Lear. The focus of this article is to analyse the level of self-differentiation of Lear and the three daughters, namely Regan, Goneril, Cordelia in King Lear. It will thoroughly investigate the fusion and differentiation in their interactions with their original and nuclear families and examine the projection of Lear’s chronic anxiety on his daughters. Chronic anxiety due to social factors, such as humanism, feudalism, and patriarchy, and their impact on the father-daughter relationship in the tragedy, will also be investigated. It argues that the father-daughter relationship in King Lear is dysfunctional due to the lower level of differentiation of self between Lear and his three daughters, the projection of Lear’s anxiety onto the daughters, and the chronic anxiety brought about by societal regression. Hence, through the lens of the Bowen family systems theory, the study of the father-daughter relationship in the play can provide a new method for examining the dysfunctional family relationship in literary works.
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Gad, Dustin, and Joan Monin. "RELATIONSHIP-TYPE DIFFERENCES IN SUPPORT SEEKING AND MENTAL HEALTH FOR ADULT CHILDREN OF PARENTS WITH MEMORY LOSS." Innovation in Aging 7, Supplement_1 (December 1, 2023): 791. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igad104.2554.

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Abstract Research shows that midlife children still rely on their parents for emotional and tangible support, which has implications for their mental health. Little is known about how these dynamics change when a parent enters the early stage of dementia or memory loss. One characteristic that may be important for these dynamics is the relationship-type (daughter-mother (n= 82), daughter-father (n= 29), son-mother (n=17), son-father (n= 14)). As part of a larger study, adult children 18 years of age and older (n= 142) completed self-report surveys including measures of emotional and tangible support seeking from their parent (Feeney, 2004), the 10-item CESD (Orme et al., 1986), the 12-item Zarit Burden Inventory (Bédard et al., 2001), and the PANAS (Watson et al., 1988). Results showed that tangible and emotional support seeking levels were low across all dyad-types, with no differences between groups. There was a trend for depressive symptoms (F= 2.559, p= .058) showing more in daughter-father than in son-mother dyads. Daughter-father dyads were the only group meeting the depression cut-off score. There were significant differences for burden (F= 3.377, *p= .020) with more burden in daughter-mother compared to son-father dyads. For the PANAS (F= 2.926, *p= .036), there was more negative affect in daughter-father compared to daughter-mother dyads. Results suggest that the relationship-type of the adult child and parent matters for mental health in the early stages of memory loss. This has implications for dyadic interventions helping adult children and their parents cope in the early stages of the dementia caregiving journey.
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9

Nygård, Mette. "The Father-Daughter Relationship in Sigrid Undset's Writings." Scandinavian Psychoanalytic Review 9, no. 2 (January 1986): 93–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01062301.1986.10592481.

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10

Her, Pa, and Alberta M. Gloria. "Kev txhawb siab: Hmong parents’ educational encouragement of their undergraduate daughter/son." Journal of Family Diversity in Education 2, no. 2 (December 6, 2016): 19–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.53956/jfde.2016.68.

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This study quantitatively examined 121 Hmong parents’ self-efficacy, expectations, and cultural values relative to their educational encouragement of their undergraduates. Differences of relationships between parents’ self-efficacy and encouragement were yielded for father-son and father-daughter pairings as well as mother-son and mother-daughter pairings, respectively. Parental self-efficacy emerged as a positive predictor of parental educational encouragement as well as mediated the relationship of expectations and encouragement. Limitations, future research, and implications are discussed.
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11

Horesh, N., E. Sommerfeld, M. Wolf, E. Zubery, and G. Zalsman. "Father–daughter relationship and the severity of eating disorders." European Psychiatry 30, no. 1 (January 2015): 114–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2014.04.004.

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AbstractBackground:Mother–daughter relationship was the focus of studies on the development of eating disorders (ED) for many years. This study aimed to examine the association between the father–daughter relationship and ED and depressive symptoms.Methods:Fifty-three women diagnosed with ED were compared to a psychiatric control group (n = 26) and to healthy participants (n = 60) regarding their perception of their fathers and the relationship with them. Assessments were done using the Parental Bonding Instrument, the Eating Disorders Questionnaire, the Body Shape Questionnaire, the Eating Attitude Test, and the Beck Depression Inventory as well as narrative-based methods.Results:Fathers’ negative attributes were significantly associated with ED and depressive symptom. Two profiles of father–daughter relationship were found, the “caring and benevolent” relationship and the “overprotective and avoidant” one. In the latter, patients displayed significantly higher levels of food-restraint, more concerns about eating and about their body shape and appearance, and higher levels of depression.Discussion:Negative perception of the father's parenting style as well as the quality of the relationship with him are crucial for the understanding of the development and persistence of ED. Therapeutic programs for ED should focus not only on the relationship with the mother but must also address the relationship with the father.
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12

Benit, Moran. "In the Footsteps of the Absent Father: The Protagonist as a Writing Subject in the Work of Ronit Matalon." IYUNIM Multidisciplinary Studies in Israeli and Modern Jewish Society 36 (December 25, 2021): 97–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.51854/bguy-36a125.

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The article addresses the literary development of the young female protagonist in Ronit Matalon’s early writing, and the character’s relationship with her absent father. Despite the prevalence of this theme, little research has been dedicated to the father-daughter relationship in Matalon’s work and its influence on the daughter’s decision to become a writer. The article examines this theme in Matalon’s young adult novel, A Story that Begins with a Snake’s Funeral (1989). My main argument here is that the father-daughter relationship in Matalon’s work is central to the construction of the daughter’s ’decision to write‘, and points to the issue of inter-generational accountability, in which the daughter is entitled to an inheritance from her father despite her critical view of him. As I will show in my reading of the novel, the fictional representation of this relationship bears an autobiographical imprint, particularly in light of Matalon’s choice to quote her father, Felix Matalon, and to lend his voice to the father figure in her writing. As part of the exploration of this theme, which consists of both fictional and autobiographical aspects, I suggest that the heroine’s efforts to place her absent father in the context of her life and to cope with his absence through her writing point to Matalon’s own efforts to deal with her father’s legacy by writing about him and giving him a place in the Israeli literary canon, while maintaining a critical attitude towards him.
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Ostaszewska, Aneta. "Daughter–Father Relationships. Biographical Research from a Feminist Perspective." Nauki o Wychowaniu. Studia Interdyscyplinarne 4, no. 1 (June 30, 2017): 204–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/2450-4491.04.13.

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This article aims to contribute to the debate about the reflection on biographical experiences, in particular, the relationship between daughter and father. It presents my research project devoted to young adult women, students, and their perceptions of their relationships with fathers. It also contains an analysis of autobiographical essays of female students (the research participants). The main idea of this research is to appreciate the women’s points of view and to underline the role of reflexivity in the constitution of self-knowledge. Also, I try to discuss my process of becoming a reflective feminist researcher.
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Ko, Eun-Im. "SimCheong-jeon, with a focus on the father-daughter relationship." Journal of Pansori 50 (October 31, 2020): 39–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.18102/jp.2020.10.50.39.

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15

Hong, Yooseon. "Interpretation of the Mutual Restraint Relationship of Six Relatives an Ideological Approach: Focusing on the Relationship between Husband and Wife, Father and Son, Mother-in-law and Daughter-in-law." Asia Cultural Creativity Institute 2, no. 2 (December 31, 2022): 75–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.54385/cbt.2022.2.2.75.

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The six relatives of Myeongrihak belong to each of the ten provinces, and they form a win-win and mutual restraint relationship. In Myeongrihak, a saju is interpreted based on the ten-star logic of the six relatives. However, it is not easy to interpret the reason for the formation of a mutual restraint relationship between relatives. For this reason, consequential interpretations are rampant. Against this background, this study attempts to reinterpret the reason why husband and wife, father and son, mother-in-law and daughter-in-law mutual restraint relationship as an ideological approach. Through this, the purpose of this study is to present consistent interpretation standards and to lay the foundation necessary for resetting the ten stars of each relative in social change. As a research method, the mutual restraint relationship between relatives was interpreted based on the ‘duty’ that social ideology requires of individuals. The results of the study are as follows. The wife was set up as a property between couples because, under patriarchal ideology, obligations such as giving birth to a son after marriage and raising parents-in-law were given. Therefore, a husband who controls a wife based on patriarchal ideology can be interpreted as a management entity. And the presence of a son between a father and a son imposes an obligation to raise the father as the head of the family. In a patriarchal society, if it is not implemented, the head of the household loses authority. Therefore, the son who imposes an obligation to raise the father is a manager, and the father is wealthy. In the relationship of a mother-in-law, the mother-in-law imposes obligations on her daughter-in-law through her son. Without a medium (son), the daughter-in-law’s obligation to foster is extinguished. Therefore, the mother-in-law is wealthy and the daughter-in-law is a manager. The results of this study are meaningful in establishing a consistent standard (obligation according to ideology) for the interpretation of the mutual restraint relationship.
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16

Caggiano, Valeria. "Parental Relations in the Middle Ages: An Exceptional Case, Christine de Pizan." Rivista Italiana di Educazione Familiare 23, no. 2 (December 28, 2023): 105–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/rief-13945.

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Essentially, the transformations that have affected parents over time have characterised the father-daughter, mother-daughter dyad. Christine de Pizan, Italian excellence in the world, is as important for historical purposes as for reflecting on the pedagogical understanding of family dynamics. The paper highlights the role of the writer’s father and mother, pointing out that these were decisive in the author’s development of her talent. While remote through the centuries, the parental relationship characterising the de Pizan family is revolutionary with respect to the Middle Ages. An example that could teach: a relationship with one’s parents and with the world.
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Etkalo, E. N., and L. A. ATRAMENTOVA. "Anxiety and depression: population distribution and family associations." Faktori eksperimental'noi evolucii organizmiv 29 (August 31, 2021): 174–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.7124/feeo.v29.1427.

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Aim. The aim of the study was to characterize the population distribution of psychiatric phenotypes according to anxiety and depression. Methods. The level of anxiety and depression was assessed with the HADS Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale test. Students in grades 9-11 of secondary schools in Kharkiv, as well as their parents, were tested. We tested 306 persons from 115 families. Results. The frequency of depression among men in the Kharkiv population is 9%, among women 11%, among boys 15%, among girls 22%; the frequency of increased anxiety among men is 14%, among women 22%, among boys 19%, among girls 44%. There is a positive relationship between anxiety and depression in older men and women, expressed by the association coefficient in men rDT =0.45, in women rDT =0.79. The relatives revealed a similarity in psychological types, described by the association index for depression in mother/daughter pairs r = 0.40, mother/son r = 0.03, father/daughter r = 0.20, father/son r = 0.40; for anxiety: mother/daughter r = 0.15, mother/son r = 0.05, father/daughter r = 0.24, father/son r = 0.01. Conclusions. Individuals of the younger generation are more likely to have signs of anxiety and depression than those of their parents' generation. The parent-offspring phenotype relationship is stronger in same-sex couples compared to opposite-sex couples. Keywords: depression, anxiety, population distribution, family analysis.
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Ruffle, Karen. "May You Learn from Their Model: The Exemplary Father-Daughter Relationship of Mohammad and Fatima in South Asian Shiism." Journal of Persianate Studies 4, no. 1 (2011): 12–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187471611x568267.

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AbstractThe special father-daughter relationship shared by Mohammad and Fatima (Fātema) is a source of inspiration and emulation for the Shia, who seek to cultivate idealized religious and ethical selves based upon their model. While Fatima and Mohammad are exceptional people who have been chosen by God to deliver and enact His message of creation, monotheism (tawhid), and the resurrection and Day of Judgment, they are also truly human beings, whose emotional and material needs resonate with everyday Shia. This essay focuses on three ways in which Mohammad and Fatima’s father-daughter relationship teaches the Shia of South Asia Islamic religious values, idealized socio-ethical norms, and proper filial relationships. First, Fatima’s earthly wedding to Ali and accounts of the minimal dowry that Mohammad provided for his daughter is frequently cast in a reformist light by South Asian Shia, who consider the adaptation of Hindu wedding practices and rituals to be contrary to the Sunna of the Prophet. Second, Fatima’s extreme poverty is a popular subject in Indo-Persian hagiographies, in which Fatima is narratively engaged to epitomize the socio-ethical ideals of charity (sadaqa), patience (sabr), and faith (imān). Third, Fatima’s impassioned speech claiming her right to inherit the orchards at Fadak is rooted in her status as Mohammad’s daughter and, more importantly, as a Muslim woman.
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Punyanunt-Carter, Narissra M. "Evaluating the Effects of Attachment Styles on Relationship Maintenance Behaviors in Father-Daughter Relationships." Family Journal 14, no. 2 (April 2006): 135–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1066480705285487.

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Thrasher, Shawndaya S., Esther K. Malm, and Cana Kim. "The Associations between Father Involvement and Father–Daughter Relationship Quality on Girls’ Experience of Social Bullying Victimization." Children 9, no. 12 (December 16, 2022): 1976. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children9121976.

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With much research into physical, cyber, and verbal bullying victimization, social bullying victimization is a type of victimization that can be hidden. Studies about Black father involvement have found involvement to be a buffer to adverse and risky behaviors of children, including different forms of victimization experienced by their daughters. This study examined one gap in the literature: the direct and potentially indirect associations between father involvement and father–child relationship quality on child reports of social bullying victimization among girls. The cross-sectional sample of 368 Black fathers and their daughters was sourced from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing study. Data from wave 5 were selected for the child (age 9) and father because social bullying victimization was first measured at this time point. Logistic regression analysis findings showed father involvement was associated with lower social bullying victimization. In addition, talking and sharing ideas quite well rather than extremely well with their fathers was associated with higher odds of social bullying victimization. Father–daughter relationship quality did not mediate the father involvement and social bullying victimization relationship. Findings provide additional support to include fathers, particularly Black fathers, in intervention/prevention efforts and the importance of increasing awareness and benefits of father involvement in subtle forms of victimization such as social bullying victimization among Black families.
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Cohen, Marie M., David K. Wellisch, Sarah R. Ormseth, and Valerie G. Yarema. "The father–daughter relationship in the wake of maternal death from breast cancer." Palliative and Supportive Care 16, no. 6 (November 8, 2017): 741–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478951517000906.

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AbstractObjectives:This paper examines whether a relationship exists between paternal psychological stability and daughters' symptomatology following the death of a wife/mother from breast cancer. Specifically, is there a relationship between paternal parenting style and the daughters' subsequent capacity to form committed relationships later in life?Methods:We assessed 68 adult daughters (average age = 23.5 years) since the mother's breast cancer diagnosis by means of a semistructured clinical interview and psychological testing.Results:The daughters were subdivided into three psychiatric risk groups. Those in the highest risk group were most likely to be single and to have high CES–Depression and STAI–Anxiety scores. Daughters in the highest risk group were also most likely to have fathers who abused substances, fathers who had experienced a serious psychiatric event, and families with the most closed communication about the mother's cancer.Significance of Results:Psychopathology in fathers correlated with increasing anxiety and depression in adult daughters. Daughters at the highest level of risk had the most severe affective states, the most disturbed father–daughter bonding, and the least ability to create successful interpersonal relationships as adults. We suggest specific interventions for these daughters of the lowest-functioning fathers.
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Youngquist, Paul, and Katherine C. Hill-Miller. ""My Hideous Progeny": Mary Shelley, William Godwin, and the Father-Daughter Relationship." Studies in Romanticism 35, no. 2 (1996): 342. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25601173.

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Jones, Ceri J., Newman Leung, and Gillian Harris. "Father-daughter relationship and eating psychopathology: The mediating role of core beliefs." British Journal of Clinical Psychology 45, no. 3 (September 2006): 319–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1348/014466505x53489.

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Cho, Han-Sun. "The Lack, Fear, and Fantasy in the Father-Daughter Relationship in Emma." Modern Studies in English Language & Literature 62, no. 2 (May 31, 2018): 249–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.17754/mesk.62.2.249.

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WISZEWSKA, A., B. PAWLOWSKI, and L. BOOTHROYD. "Father–daughter relationship as a moderator of sexual imprinting: a facialmetric study." Evolution and Human Behavior 28, no. 4 (July 2007): 248–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2007.02.006.

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Suharto, Ririn Pratiwi. "The Effect of Patriarchal Ideology on Daughter's Character Building in Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House on the Prairie." Journal of Development Research 2, no. 1 (May 17, 2018): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.28926/jdr.v2i1.47.

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The character of daughter is built by her father patriarchal ideology in patrilineal kinship. For example, that issue was depicted on Laura as a daughter in Laura Ingalls Wilder Little House on the Prairie (1971). This study aims to explain the way of Laura thinking and behaving which are influenced by her father patriarchal ideology. Then, this study aims to explain the success of her father patriarchal ideology on Laura character building in that novel. This study was a kind of library research. The research method of this study was close reading by using feminism approach. The results of this study showed that first, the character of Laura had been built by her father patriarchal ideology through the way of thinking in Little House on the Prairie (1971). Laura had a forward thinking pattern for the future. She also had the ability to think quickly and logically. She also had a similar thought with her father about the animal skill. She was also able to think critically, as an adult about her safety and the Ingalls family. Second, the way of Laura behaving was also built by her father patriarchal ideology. Laura had an affectionate behaviour toward fellow creatures. She was also be nice when she made a new relationship with the stranger people. She also had a polite behaviour to respect others. Third, Laura father patriarchal ideology was successfully influenced her daughter character building in Laura Ingalls Wilder Little House on the Prairie. Pa as Laura father was considered became the protector for Laura and the Ingalls family. He was also positioned as the superior one by Laura, even he was considered became a hero for the Ingalls family. Pa was also considered had an important role by Laura in her life and also the Ingalls family.
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Dumas, Colette A. "Preparing the New CEO: Managing the Father-Daughter Succession Process in Family Businesses." Family Business Review 3, no. 2 (June 1990): 169–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1741-6248.1990.00169.x.

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The personality of the CEO has a profound impact on the structure, culture, and strategy of small- and medium-sized firms, and the relationship between CEO-father and successor-daughter is a key element in the development of the daughter's personality.
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Ștefan, Elena Ancuța. "Trails of Cultural Memory: Rediscovering Shylock as a Father Figure in the 21st Century." Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory 7, no. 2 (December 17, 2021): 201–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/mjcst.2021.12.13.

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Given that in the last few decades theories of adaptation have advanced enormously, with such names as Linda Hutcheon setting the theoretical premise of these ideas, it is essential to see how certain aspects present in canonical texts have been translated into present-day literature. In this paper, I discuss how the father-daughter relationship in The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare, has been (re)interpreted through the carrying of similar characters and situations in the novel Shylock Is My Name by Howard Jacobson. The novel does not only serve as a means of projecting old ideas as new, but it also provides the stage of resolution for such prominent characters as Shylock. In order to have a broader understanding of the (re)interpreted father-daughter relationship, this chapter will take into account the sociological symbolism of the contemporary text, with Erik Erikson’s descriptions of adolescence in the foreground.
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S. R., Varsini, and Antoinette Daniel. "Class Transfuge in Annie Ernauxs A Mans Place." International Journal for Research in Applied Science and Engineering Technology 11, no. 8 (August 31, 2023): 1617–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.22214/ijraset.2023.55419.

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Abstract: A Man’s Place is a memoirist by Annie Ernaux revealing the life of her father. Ernaux distributes her memories of her father elucidating class alienation and the shame that haunted him during his lifetime. It is an unsentimental portrait of her father, a man from the working class from whom she grew distant as her circumstances changed from a working-class daughter to a married middle-class career woman. The author traverses across her father’s life trying to capture every nuance of it explaining his actions and the role he played in society. The paper illustrates the relationship between the author and her father. Ernaux describes how her education and change in lifestyle detached her from her father, a straightforward man who battled the hardships of life without adequate formal education. Her father, son of Normandy farmhands, evolves from a struggling cowherd to a marginal businessman who runs a café cum grocery store along with his wife. His greatest achievement in life was to provide his daughter with the life he was denied. Throughout his life, he lives with the fear of poverty and the shame of ignorance. Nevertheless, the man was loved as a parent and admired as an individual.
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Narissra Maria Punyanunt-Carter. "An Examination of Communication Motives and Relationship Maintenance Behaviors in Thai and US Father-Daughter Relationships." Asian Communication Research 13, no. 1 (June 2016): 157–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.20879/acr.2016.13.1.157.

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Saha, Dr Santanu. "“The Rule of Father”: A Study of Father-Daughter Relationship in Select Poems of Indian Poetry in English." International Journal of English Literature and Social Sciences 7, no. 4 (2022): 244–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.22161/ijels.74.36.

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Indian Poetry in English by women writers has been giving birth to several issues related to feminism. These poets are trying to express their long-suppressed voice through these issues. However, in most cases they are posting their fight against patriarchy. Patriarchy, as a male dominated social system, always seems hostile to the liberation of women by suppressing their identity. Modern women poets are successful in disturbing this traditional mindset. My paper will try to focus on another perspective of this issue where ‘father’ is supposed to be the agent of patriarchal domination. I’ve tried to analyze some poems by Indian women poets in English who have incorporated ‘father’ as a character in their poems in order to expose male domination. And it is not surprising to notice that several women poets are linked by the same issue as they are a part of same social system.
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Gyárfás, Orsolya. "The Tyrannous Father in Opera Seria." Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Musica 68, Sp.Iss. 1 (July 20, 2023): 85–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/subbmusica.2023.spiss1.06.

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"The article examines the role and function of the father figure in the libretti of Pietro Metastasio, focusing on the representations of the tyrannous rather than the benevolent father. The bulk of his oeuvre written for the Viennese court, Metastasio’s libretti took an active role in propagating the reigning and intertwining social–political systems of absolutist monarchy and patriarchy. The tyrannous father figure served to heighten the usual tension of the contradictory duties of public and private lives, highlighting the dilemma of how far the paterfamilias should be obeyed and his mistreatment towards his child be suffered, analyzed here through the example of Artabano in Artaserse, also pointing out the differing relationship dynamic and dramatic treatment of father–son and father–daughter relationships. Through Astiage in Ciro riconosciuto, the article examines the role of the tyrant, the political ""bad father"", and how his figure ultimately serves to reinforce the absolutist system and the claim of the divine right of kings. Keywords: opera seria, Metastasio, absolutism, patriarchy, operatic dramaturgy"
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Rodgers, Catherine. "Simone de Beauvoir et son père: un « amour de tête » déçu." Nottingham French Studies 58, no. 1 (March 2019): 28–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/nfs.2019.0234.

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This article gives a detailed analysis of the ways in which, principally in Mémoires d'une jeune fille rangée, but also in other autobiographical texts, Simone de Beauvoir constructs her relationship with her father in order to elaborate her own ‘belle histoire’, simplifying the portrait of her father and playing down the influence he had on her development as an intellectual, a woman and feminist theorist. Beauvoir, who boasted of combining ‘un cœur de femme, un cerveau d'homme’, conducts herself both as a daughter whose love for her father is scorned, and as a son and rival to the latter.
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Guittonneau, Mireille. "From the Mother's Non-Desire to the "Incestual? Relationship between Father and Daughter." Recherches en psychanalyse 14, no. 2 (2012): 155a. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rep.014.0155a.

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Haaz, Dawn H., Meredith Kneavel, and Scott W. Browning. "The Father–Daughter Relationship and Intimacy in the Marriages of Daughters of Divorce." Journal of Divorce & Remarriage 55, no. 2 (February 2014): 164–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10502556.2013.871962.

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Nazki, Dr Sameeul Haq. "Daddy-Daughter, Hitler-Jews in Sylvia Plath’s Poetry: Exploring Paternal Influence and Holocaust Imagery." June-July 2024, no. 44 (June 15, 2024): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.55529/jpps.44.1.11.

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This study investigates the metaphorical connections between the Daddy-Daughter relationship and the Hitler-Jews dynamic in Sylvia Plath’s poetry. Plath is renowned for her evocative and melancholic poetry, which explores intricate topics of Holocaust imagery and paternal influence. The purpose of this research is to examine the complex interactions between historical trauma, familial ties, and individual suffering in Plath’s poetry. Plath’s confessional technique allows her to infuse her very personal issues with wider socio-political implications. Plath explores the tense relationship between a daughter and her father while tying Nazi Germany and the Holocaust into the story. The figure of the father becomes a symbol of oppressive authority, reminiscent of both her father and the tyrannical figure of Hitler. The amalgamation of personal and historical pain mirrors Plath’s personal battles with authoritative fatherhood and the aftermath of World War II. Plath’s poems conjure themes of persecution, pain, and the quest for identity through allusions to Hitler and the Jews. Her mastery is evident in the manner in which personal and historical narratives overlap and inform each other in her work by looking at the issue of “Daddy-Daughter and Hitler-Jews”. This study strives to expand comprehension of her poetic vision and its continuing relevance in modern debate through an analysis of her use of language, imagery, and symbolism. Thus the goal is to offer new perspectives on Plath’s work that both captivate and challenge readers across generations, inviting them to engage with her poetry in a more nuanced and profound manner.
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Del Sol Calderon, P., A. Izquierdo, and M. García Moreno. "The importance of the family situation to understand the role of anorexia symptoms." European Psychiatry 64, S1 (April 2021): S706. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1870.

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IntroductionThe objective of this poster is to show the importance of understanding the situation of the patient’s family in order to know the development and role that eating symptoms are occupying both in the patient and in the different members that make up the familyObjectivesHighlight the triggering and sustaining factors of a case of anorexia nervosaMethodsCase ReportResultsPatient is a 14-year-old woman who begins to develop excessive concern about her body image initiating eating behaviors in the form of high restriction and counting of calories from food. Also she explains that she began to compulsively perform more than two hours a day of sports in order to lose weight Family genogram: she is an only daughter, whose parents have been separated for 4 years. Parents recognize conflictive relationship. The patient recognizes a very close relationship with her mother. When she talks about her relationship with her father, she explains how she felt very close to her father when she was young but that after the separation her father moved away. She describes that his father rebuilt his life a year ago and that he recently informed her that he is going to be a father again. She recognizes intense feelings of abandonment from her father. She acknowledges that the sense of control starting with anorexia initially helped her to feel confident about herself.ConclusionsUnderstanding the origin of the symptoms and their function is essential for a better management of cases of anorexiaDisclosureNo significant relationships.
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Connell, Stacie M. "There Was a Young Woman Who Lived in a Shoe: Understanding the Juxtaposition of Love, Hate, And Patriarchal ConfinementIn Sylvia Plath’s poem “Daddy”." Advances in Language and Literary Studies 12, no. 5 (October 31, 2021): 48. http://dx.doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.12n.5.p.48.

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In the opening of Sylvia Plath’s poem “Daddy” one glimpses a troubled young woman struggling to break free from patriarchal confinement. In a stark play on imagery, she equates her tomb of darkness to a “black shoe” where she has submissively “lived like a foot//Barely daring to breathe or Achoo” for her entire life (Plath 2-3,5). Plath opens the poem with an oppressive tone of confinement. Her tone is that of a victim unable to break free from the powerful pressing of her father. The daughter is acknowledging her life-long imprisonment through the image of conformity and obedience. Her testimony, “You do not do, you do not do/Anymore.” is an awakening, an ethereal understanding, she is no longer satisfied with being under her father’s foot (Plath 1-2). She mocks her submissiveness and fear by “Barely daring to breathe.” or express her autonomy outside of the domineering treatment designated by her father (Plath 5). “Daddy” juxtaposes the extremely childish and infantile dependency on the image of father versus the inherent desire to break free from the entrapment of masculine dominance. As Maher Mahdi points out in the article “From a Victim of the Feminine Mystique,” Plath is using “aspects of objectification” to create a breakdown of the typical family dynamic between father and daughter (98). The struggle is real, vigorous, and traumatic to the daughter speaking blatantly throughout the lines of “Daddy.” The battle rages as father and daughter fight metaphorically within the confines of the speaker’s mind. Plath offers the war-torn country as a backdrop to ease the reader into a sense of disquiet and upheaval. There is something obscenely immature in her attachment to the deceased father. She loves and hates him, desires her independence yet craves the security of her dependency, and she longs for him and yet strives to exorcise his demon from within her own soul. This emotional upheaval allows the reader to assess the speaker’s mental anguish and analyze “Daddy” on a more complex level. This study will explore 1) The juxtaposition of victim versus villain in the familial relationship of father and daughter; 2) The daughter’s search for autonomy and her unhealthy Oedipus complex; 3) Establishing identity beyond infantile attachment, or as Maher Mahdi points out, breaking free from immaturity requires a certain amount of viciousness in order for the daughter’s true liberation (Mahdi 100); 4) The exposure of the Jekyll and Hyde persona, which is noted by Isabelle Travis as the “blurred line” between recognizing the issues and finding one’s own part in the familial downfall (Travis 279).
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Settle, Victoria. "Double father trouble: a daughter's struggle with paternity." Special issue – Fathers 16, no. 2 (December 4, 2022): 161–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.33212/att.v16n2.2022.161.

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In this article I will consider the complexity of the relationship between a daughter and her father within the context of the wider family constellation, and how working with a male analyst evoked both transferential and countertransferential material. When we are attachment figures to our clients, we can be particularly evocative of the same-sex parent because of the ways in which the transference is embodied in the flesh. In this case, the male analyst became over identified with my client's father in ways that were problematic for her and for the work.
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Babrow, Austin S., and Fran J. Babrow. "Letting Go, Holding On." Departures in Critical Qualitative Research 8, no. 1 (2019): 72–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/dcqr.2019.8.1.72.

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Oxymoronically, existence is change, or so say the sages. Without stability, meaning degrades to meaninglessness. In a series of letters, a father and daughter try to understand stability and change, love and loss, dependence and freedom, the parent–child relationship, and head and heart, as they consider an opportunity to write about migration as family history.
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Mori, M. "The influence of father-daughter relationship and girls' sex-roles on girls' self-esteem." Archives of Women's Mental Health 2, no. 1 (May 15, 1999): 45–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s007370050034.

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Alquraidhy, Khalil. "Human Relations in Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice." International Journal of Language and Literary Studies 4, no. 4 (December 29, 2022): 314–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.36892/ijlls.v4i4.1146.

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This research study aims to highlight and discuss Human Relations in Jane Austen's novel Pride and Prejudice, in which she has selected the basic unit of human relationship, the family. In the family there are several forms of relationships among them the most fundamental relationship is in terms of love and marriage which form the basic theme of the novel Pride and Prejudice along with the theme of human relations. By a close reading of the novel, the present study will analyse and discuss parents and children's relations, friends' relations, and other minor relations. To discuss parents and children's relations the focus will be on the relationship between Mr. Bennet, the father and Elizabeth, the daughter. From a vantage point of view, the daughter reviews the relationship between her father and mother as husband and wife in terms of their love and marriage. She finds it damaging to the family and rejects it. Steering clear of them she treads over her own path. In other words, she doesn't accept her parents as role–models. What is true, socially, and artistically, about the relationship between parents and daughters also holds true about the relationship between the friends, and it has also been discussed and analyzed in this research study. Charlotte Lucas has a realist's idea of marriage. Elizabeth has an idealist's idea of marriage. It is suggested that the ideal becomes perfect only when it accommodates the real. There are a few other minor relations developed around the characters of Wickham and the Gardiners. They play an active role in further clarifying and reinforcing Elizabeth's vision of a marriage with affection.
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Panday, Ghan Shyam. "The Relationship between Female and Nonhuman Entities in Anita Desai’s 'Cry, the Peacock'." Journal of Population and Development 1, no. 1 (November 27, 2020): 46–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jpd.v1i1.33103.

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The major finding of this research is to draw the association between how women are suppressed and exploited by patriarchy and nature has been exploited and disbursed by humankinds in different pretentions. By reading the novel ‘Cry, the Peacock’ in the light of Ecofeminism, the issue of domination and exploitation of women and nature has been brought out. In the novel, Maya, the protagonist, is the daughter of the rich father, is brought up by him in absence of her mother. Maya’s father finds a lawyer friend Gautama as her husband who could fulfill all her desires and needs. Ultimately, Gautama’s realistic and rational presence cannot satisfy the emotional attachment to Maya. As Maya cannot establish proper communication and understanding, she feels loneliness and desolated in Gautama’s house like that of exploited and disbursed nature cannot provide shelter to humans and other creatures.
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Halim, Indra, and Ikhsan Darwis. "Urgensi Penetapan Wali Nikah Bagi Perempuan Yang Lahir Kurang Dari 6 Bulan Setelah Akad Nikah Dari Perkawinan Hamil Perspektif Hukum Islam." Jurnal Tana Mana 1, no. 1 (June 30, 2020): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.33648/jtm.v1i1.144.

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The purpose of the study was to find out the meaning of his father for women born less than 6 months after the marriage contract from a pregnant marriage perspective ofIslamic law and to find out the determination of the marriage guardian for women born less than 6 months after the marriage contract from a pregnant marriage Islamic law perspective. From the results of the study, the relationship between his father and daughter born less than 6 months according to Islamic law is that the child is an illegitimate child and cannot be taboo with his biological father due to a period of birth with at least 6 (six) months of marriage . This happened the ijma of Islamic law experts as the shortest period of a pregnancy, and also all the schools of jurisprudence both Sunni and Syiah agreed that the minimum pregnancy limit was 6 (six) months because at least pregnant women were for six months. and if the child is considered as a legitimate child, then the daughter's nasab remains with her biological father and the marriage guardian's determination for girls born less than 6 months according to Islamic law, if the daughter is an illegitimate child then her guardian's determination is to use the guardian of the judge to marry him Keywords: Determination of Marriage Guardian, Pregnant Marriage Perspective of Islamic Law
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Halim, Indra, and Ikhsan Darwis. "Urgensi Penetapan Wali Nikah Bagi Perempuan Yang Lahir Kurang Dari 6 Bulan Setelah Akad Nikah Dari Perkawinan Hamil Perspektif Hukum Islam." Jurnal Tana Mana 1, no. 1 (June 30, 2020): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.33648/jtm.v1i1.144.

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The purpose of the study was to find out the meaning of his father for women born less than 6 months after the marriage contract from a pregnant marriage perspective ofIslamic law and to find out the determination of the marriage guardian for women born less than 6 months after the marriage contract from a pregnant marriage Islamic law perspective. From the results of the study, the relationship between his father and daughter born less than 6 months according to Islamic law is that the child is an illegitimate child and cannot be taboo with his biological father due to a period of birth with at least 6 (six) months of marriage . This happened the ijma of Islamic law experts as the shortest period of a pregnancy, and also all the schools of jurisprudence both Sunni and Syiah agreed that the minimum pregnancy limit was 6 (six) months because at least pregnant women were for six months. and if the child is considered as a legitimate child, then the daughter's nasab remains with her biological father and the marriage guardian's determination for girls born less than 6 months according to Islamic law, if the daughter is an illegitimate child then her guardian's determination is to use the guardian of the judge to marry him Keywords: Determination of Marriage Guardian, Pregnant Marriage Perspective of Islamic Law
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46

Yang, Natalie. "Self Hatred East Asian Woman Females Misogyny Breeds from Father-Daughter and Mother-Daughter Relationships in Japan and China." Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media 2, no. 1 (March 1, 2023): 373–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.54254/2753-7048/2/2022291.

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Misogyny, which refers to the misrepresentation and degrading of women as reflected in an aversion to femininity, feminism, and things associated with women, is an important maintenance of the patriarchy society. Misogyny is described as a disease in Chinese, however, granted that the translation describes it as something needed to be correct, East Asia cultural circle as a whole oftentimes neglect the importance of it since women get so used to being treat in a misogynistic manner by both men and women even though it could be the main source of threat to womens right in the workplace and homestead. The fact that women are also susceptible to misogyny making it unnoticeable is worth to research as this type of misogyny between women is the advance version of the reproductive competition driven by natural desire, however, circumventing is type of same-sex loath is possible, and beneficial to gender equality. To this end, searching for the manifestation of misogyny existing in the same-sex relationship is one of the biggest targets of this paper as well. Inspired by the motive of Tomohiro Kato for executing the Akihabara Massacre, this paper was written in attempt to answer serval questions of why both men and women are susceptible to misogyny; why misogyny is so entrenching; how does misogony pass on from parents to daughters; what are the manifestation of misogyny in literatures; how to get rid of misogyny or make it less susceptible.
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Zhu, Manjie. "Analysis the lack of parent-daughter relationship in the current junior high school Chinese textbooks." Advances in Education, Humanities and Social Science Research 2, no. 1 (September 20, 2022): 406. http://dx.doi.org/10.56028/aehssr.1.2.406.

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This article analyzes the current version of middle school Chinese textbooks, the Jiangsu version, the Chinese version, the Beijing Normal University version, the Changchun version, the Lujiao version, the People's Education version (May 4th school system), Lujiao version (May 4th school system), Shanghai Education version of the teaching content of father's love in 9 editions of junior high school Chinese textbooks and summarizes the problem of lack of father-daughter relationship in current junior high school Chinese textbooks ,also puts forward countermeasures.
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Gish, Elizabeth. "Producing High Priests and Princesses: The Father-Daughter Relationship in the Christian Sexual Purity Movement." Religions 7, no. 3 (March 18, 2016): 33. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel7030033.

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Steinhilber, Kylie M., Sukanya Ray, Debra A. Harkins, and Megan E. Sienkiewicz. "Father–daughter relationship dynamics & daughters’ body image, eating patterns, and empowerment: An exploratory study." Women & Health 60, no. 10 (August 22, 2020): 1083–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03630242.2020.1801554.

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Paiva Morão, Ana Maria. "Relationship Among Siblings in Portuguese Versions of the Pan-Hispanic Ballad Delgadinha." Tautosakos darbai 59 (June 2, 2020): 30–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.51554/td.2020.28364.

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Delgadinha (IGR 0075) is one of the most widespread ballads (romances) in the pan-Hispanic world (Portuguese and Spanish-speaking communities and Sephardies) and perhaps one of the most studied, as many scholars have produced articles about it from different perspectives. The present study is a literary analysis of the ballad, considering some anthropological and sociological aspects. It focuses on Portuguese versions, also bearing in mind the other pan-Hispanic branches and features, mainly the part of Delgadinha’s narrative concerning the reactions of the girl’s siblings towards her situation.The theme of Delgadinha is an attempted father / daughter incest. When she refuses, her father locks her in a tower providing her with salty food and limited or brackish water. The girl desperately begs every family member for water but none of them helps in any way. When she finally tells her father that she will give in, he sends her a jar of clear water, but the girl is already dead when it arrives.This paper analyses the different excuses and arguments invoked by siblings in refusing help, grouping them by type. It studies the variation of this conduct in order to understand the siblings’ relationship within the family structure and the world of the ballad.
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