Sam Shepard and the Dysfunctional American Family: Therapeutic Perspectives
Abstract
A series of family dramas by the Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright Sam Shepard provides a shocking look at the breakdown of the family as central organizing unit. Using Curse of the Starving Class as a model, this article examines family processes in the play and the biographical roots of Shepard’s interest in dysfunctional families.
Shepard’s exploration of differentiation, boundaries, marital disintegration and parental ineffectiveness, isolation, family goals and purpose, and inter generational legacies is a helpful reminder for therapists who focus primarily on technique and/or internal family dynamics to consider community ties and the significance of family rituals.
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