Holmes, Jeremy, 1943-

John Bowlby and attachment theory [electronic book] / Jeremy Holmes. - online resource (xi, 249 pages) : illustrations - Makers of modern psychotherapy .

Includes bibliographical references (p. [228]-243) and index.

Part I: Origins Chapter -- Introduction -- Biographical -- Maternal deprivation -- Part II: Attachment theory -- Attachment, anxiety, internal working models -- Loss, anger and grief -- Attachment theory and personality development: the Research evidence -- Part III: Implications -- Bowlby and the inner world: Attachment theory and psychoanalysis -- Attachment theory and the practice of psychotherapy -- Attachment theory and psychiatric disorder -- Attachment theory and society

John Bowlby (1907-1990) has been described as 'one of the three or four most important psychiatrists of the twentieth century'. In this book Jeremy Holmes provides a focused and coherent account of Bowlby's life and work, based on interviews with members of his family and with psychoanalysts who knew him. Bowlby's Attachment Theory is one of the major theoretical developments in psychoanalysis this half-century. Combining the rigorous scientific empiricism of ethology with the subjective insights of psychoanalysis, it has had an enormous impact in the fields of child development, social work, psychology, and psychiatry. Jeremy Holmes examines the origins of Bowlby's ideas, and presents the main features of Attachment Theory and their relevance to contemporary psychoanalytic psychotherapy. He looks at the processes of attachment, and of loss, and reviews recent experimental evidence linking secure attachment in infancy with the development of 'autobiographical competence'. He also provides fascinating insights into the history of the psychoanalytic movement, and considers the way in which Attachment Theory can help in understanding society and its problems. An overview and summary of John Bowlby's life in a condensed and readable form, and presents the main features of Attachment Theory and their relevance to contemporary psychoanalytic movement and looks at the ways in which Attachment Theory can help in the understanding of society and its problems. In the three sections of the book the author first examines the origins of Bowlby's ideas, the discovery of Attachment Theory which brings together the principles of psychoanalysis and of ethology, and also a discussion of 'maternal depriviation' and its critics, both feminist and experimental. The second section is an exposition of Attachment Theory looking at the processes of attachment itself, and loss and recent experimental evidence linking secure attachment in infancy with the development of 'autobiographical competence' is reviewed. The third section of the book consists of the applications of Attachment Theory in psychoanalysis, adult psychotherapy, psychiatry and sociology.






Electronic reproduction.:
ProQuest LibCentral.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.

0415077303 041507729X 9780203136805 (e-book) 0203136802 (e-book)

92045842


Bowlby, John


Attachment behavior in children.
Psychotherapy
Attachment behavior.

155.4182