Attachment Theory

Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives

Attachment Theory: Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives

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About the Book

At a historic conference in Toronto in October 1993, developmental researchers and clinicians came together for the first time to explore the implications of current knowledge of attachment. This volume is the outcome of their labors. It offers innovative approaches to the understanding of such diverse clinical topics as child abuse, borderline personality disorder, dissociation, adolescent suicide, treatment responsiveness, false memory, narrative competence, and the intergenerational transmission of trauma.

Reviews

"John Bowlby would be thrilled by this volume, which honors his memory by reviewing his theory of attachment in the light of today's advancements in basic developmental knowledge, clinical thinking, and newer methods of inquiry. An array of distinguished contributors present programmatic research and integrative perspectives in highly readable chapters. Attachment theory emerged from multidisciplinary psychoanalytic roots, from considerations of evolutionary biology, and from Bowlby's strong belief that multiple methods and approaches were necessary to advance our knowledge and development and its deviations. This book masterfully illustrates the correctness of Bowlby's view as attachment theory is applied, modified, and extended. Readers will experience the excitement of how a changing and useful theory of human relationships opens our eyes still further to new vistas. The latter will be an especially important grounding as we come to assimilate the anticipated knowledge explosion in genetics and the neurosciences."

- Robert N. Emde, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine

"After four decades of painstaking theoretical and empirical work, attachment theorists are now returning to the clinical roots of attachment theory. This is the basic message of Attachment Theory: Social, Developmental, and Clincal Perspectives, in which leading developmentalists, biologists, and clinicians discuss in great depth recent advances in attachment theory, with special emphasis on its clinical applications. The volume is uniquely broad in scope, offering new evidence and fresh insights into attachment across the life-cycle. In particular, the recent upsurge of studies of adult attachment provides a number of unexpected and exciting links to clinical diagnosis along with new avenues for pursuing the therapeutic process. A tribute to John Bowlby, who originated attachment theory, this impressively coherent, well-edited book succeeds in discussing issues of attachment, separation, and loss in an advanced yet nontechnical way. Helping to bridge the gap between basic research and clinical applications, it will serve as a standard reference work on attachment, and as a major source of inspiration to researchers and clinicians alike."

- Marinus H. van Ijzendoorn, Ph.D., Professor and Chair, Center for Child and Family Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands

"This book is a rare jewel, a multiauthored textbook that is must reading for any clinician or research investigator interested in a comprehensive review of the current field of attachment theory...Goldberg, Muir, and Kerr are to be congratulated on a work that was both marvelously conceived and wonderfully executed. Every professional working with children and infants needs to read this book. The scope of Bowlby's vision and Ainsworth's research deserve the full measure of recognition that this book imparts."

- James J. Lynch, Ph.D., Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease

Table of Contents

Introduction, Goldberg I. Origins and Context of Attachment Theory 1. "Something There Is That Doesn't Love a Wall": John Bowlby, Attachment Theory, and Psychoanalysis, Holmes 2. The Origins of Attachment Theory: John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth, Bretherton 3. The Evolution and History of Attachment Research and Theory, Grossmann 4. The Developmental Perspectives of Attachment and Psychoanalytic Theory, Eagle II. Contemporary Research 5. The Origins of Attachment Security: "Classical" and Contextual Determinants, Belsky, Rosenberger, Crnic 6. Influence of Attachment Theory on Ethological Studies of Biobehavioral Development in Nonhuman Primates, Suomi 7. Hidden Regulators: Implications for a New Understanding of Attachment, Separation, and Loss, Hofer III: Clinical Significance and Applications of Attachment 8. Attachment, the Reflective Self, and Borderline States: The Predictive Specificity of the Adult Attachment Interview and Pathological Emotional Development, Fonagy, Steele, Steele, Leigh, Kennedy, Mattoon, Target 9. Child Maltreatment and Attachment Organization: Implications for Intervention, Cicchetti, Toth 10. Attachment Organization and Vulnerability to Loss, Separation, and Abuse in Disturbed Adolescents, Adam, Keller, West 11. Disorganized/Disoriented Attachment in the Psychotherapy of the Dissociative Disorders, Liotti IV. New Directions in Attachment Theory 12. Attachment and Psychopathology, Crittenden 13. Recent Studies in Attachment: Overviews, with Selected Implications for Clinical Work, Main

About the Author(s)

Susan Goldberg, Ph.D., is a Research Scientist at the Hospital for Sick Chidren, Toronto, and Professor of Psychiatry and Psychology, University of Toronto.

Roy Muir, M.D., is Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Co-head, Infancy Program, Division of Child Psychiatry, University of Toronto.

John Kerr is former Associate Editor of The Analytic Press and author, A Most Dangerous Method: The Story of Jung, Freud, and Sabina Spielrein.

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