Beschreibung
This accessible book draws on unique evidence from oral histories and little-known archive material to shed new light on the working relationships which led to John Bowlbys shift from psychoanalysis to ethology as a frame of reference and ultimately to the development of attachment theory.A unique exploration of the origins of Bowlbys ideas and the critical transformation in his thinking offers an alternative to standard accounts of the origin of attachment theoryExplores the significance of Bowlbys influential working relationships with Robert Hinde, Harry Harlow, James Robertson and Mary AinsworthProvides students, academics, and practitioners with clear insights into the development of attachment theoryAccessible to general readers interested in psychology and psychoanalysis
Autorenportrait
Frank C. P. van der Horst is a psychologist at De Waag Rotterdam, an outpatient clinic for forensic psychiatry, and a researcher at the Centre for Child and Family Studies, Leiden University. His research aims at describing the history of ideas in the behavioural sciences, such as the ideas and work of John Bowlby, René Spitz, William Goldfarb, Jean Piaget, and Harry Harlow.
Inhalt
About the Author.
Foreword (Professor Jerome Kagan).
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
1 Biographical Notes and Early Career.
2 Loneliness in Infancy: The WHO Report and Issues of Separation.
3 Working with James Robertson: The Importance of Observation.
4 Bowlbys Acquaintance with Ethology: The Work of Lorenz, Tinbergen, and Hinde.
5 From Theoretical Claims to Empirical Evidence: Harry Harlow and the Nature of Love.
6 Mary Ainsworth's Role in the Study of Attachment.
Conclusions.
References.
Name Index.
Subject Index.
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