Loss (Attachment and Loss Volume 3)

by John Bowlby

Paperback, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

155.418

Collection

Publication

Pimlico (1998), Edition: New Ed, 496 pages

Description

In this third and final volume John Bowlby completes the trilogy Attachment anf Loss, his much acclaimed work on the importance of the parental relationship to mental health. Here he examines the ways in which young children respond to a temporary of permenant loss of a mother-figure and the expression of anxiety, grief and mourning which accompany such loss. The theories presented differ in many ways from those advanced by Freu d and elaborated by his followers, so much so that the frame of reference now offered for understanding personality developement and psychopathology amounts to a new paradigm. The publication of Attachment and Loss will prove a turning point in t he history of psychoanalysis and psychology generally T. L. S.

User reviews

LibraryThing member childfamily
Bowlby regards a close attachment to one or more people as just as important as food and drink. A baby is born with the ability to develop behaviour patterns that make his mother respond. For instance, a baby quickly learns that as a rule his crying will bring his mother to him. Later he begins to
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smile and thus obtains another form of attention. Gradually he can hold tightly, follow her, seek and call. The goal of this contacting behaviour is to have his mother in the close proximity which gives the child most security. This may be contact as close as sitting on her lap if he is afraid or upset. If he is three years old, it may be enough for her to be within sight. Later the optimum distance may be within earshot. Age and needs are continually changing the distance which gives the ‘appropriate’ security. Adolescence is a period in which the youngster is uncertain of the optimum distance, but attachment to parents is still crucial to his development. Later new bonds are normally developed to a partner, children and friends. Bowlby stresses that individual needs for a close attachment with a flexible optimum distance vary throughout life.

People who have difficulties with what Erik Erikson calls basic trust and Bowlby calls the optimum distance to others often need professional help in their grief work. They find it especially hard to let go of control. In their earliest childhood they experienced fear, emptiness and the feeling of being abandoned, and they know intuitively that they risk experiencing these feelings again if they give up control. As adults they have attached themselves to others in an unhealthy and rigid way.

John Bowlby and Alice Miller both look upon psychoanalysis as their foundation and have both, after a lifetime’s work on the concepts of psychoanalysis, found it necessary to make some revision of them in various areas. What has been most intriguing to us is that, apparently independently, they agree on the great importance for the child’s development of external losses and traumas. It is not the traumatic occurrence itself that leaves its traces, but the way the parents accommodate the child’s emotional reaction to the loss or trauma.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1980

Physical description

8.5 inches

ISBN

0712666265 / 9780712666268
Page: 0.4047 seconds