RT Journal A1 RYCKOFF I, DAY J, WYNNE LC T1 MAintenance of stereotyped roles in the families of schizophrenics JF A.M.A. Archives of General Psychiatry JO A.M.A. Archives of General Psychiatry YR 1959 FD July 1 VO 1 IS 1 SP 93 OP 98 DO 10.1001/archpsyc.1959.03590010109012 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1959.03590010109012 AB Schizophrenia has been considered, by those concerned with environmental factors, to have etiological roots in various aspects of environmental pathology, including symbiotic mother-child relationship, trauma, and empathically communicated anxiety. Although this approach has been fruitful, it has seemed to us to emphasize selectively one or another single factor; we have felt that it would be helpful to begin to develop a larger frame of reference which would make possible the inclusion of the environment as a whole in our formulations. The family, comprising almost all of the child’s environment, seems to be a natural object of study in an attempt to arrive at formulations based not on any one relationship or event but on dynamic elements which permeate all relationships and events in the child’s life.Our approach, then, is based on the view of the family as an integrated unit, a social subsystem, the character