The tumultuous history of the attachment idea---and the pioneers who fought for it. Now in a fully expanded and updated 30th anniversary edition.
Robert Karen's Becoming Attached tells the story of one of the great undertakings of modern psychology: the hundred-year quest to understand what children need and what constitutes good-enough parenting.
A century ago, most childcare experts were clueless about love and its role in child development. Behaviorists warned against spoiling children with too much affection ("Never hug and kiss them, never let them sit in your lap"), while geneticists argued that parental love is irrelevant because genes alone determine who we are. Into this confusion stepped John Bowlby, the headstrong British psychoanalyst whose decades-long partnership with American psychologist Mary Ainsworth would revolutionize child development and childcare.
In recent decades attachment research has exploded worldwide, as evidence for the benefits of secure attachment grow. Numerous studies attest to attachment's critical role in emotion regulation, self-confidence, sensitivity, empathy, the capacity to forgive, and much else.
Crucial questions about child rearing can now be answered. Are babies able to handle separations from the mother? What are the risks of daycare for children under one, and what can parents do to manage those risks? How essential is the sensitivity, reliability, self-awareness, and joyfulness of parental love? And how does the nature of parental love change as the child grows older? What do live fMRI studies reveal about the neural patterns of the loving parent, which also appear in the adoring infant and in adult romance? What have we learned about parental psychology, good and bad, and how it works its way into the child? How important is the perfectly (or poorly) synchronized play between parent and baby, invisible until the advent of slow-motion video?
Karen tells a dramatic story of scientists at work and at war, what happens to research when politics and gender roles get involved, and how the nature-nurture debate shifts with the discovery that childhood experience can alter the expression of genes?
Karen shares personal anecdotes drawn from the lives of leading attachment researchers, from his patients, and from his own experience to illuminate attachment themes. He argues that we all have elements of security and insecurity in our psyches, with the insecure self readily activated in intimate relationships. He writes: "When conflicts arise, the insecure self threatens to commandeer our being, leading us, as though through quicksand, into a repetition of old patterns." And, yet, Karen contends, attachment status can change, and what he calls "seeking one's secure self" is an essential quest of mature adulthood.
For many readers Becoming Attached will be not just a voyage of discovery in child development and its pertinence to adult life, but a voyage of personal discovery as well; for it is almost impossible to read this material without reflecting on one's own life as a child, a parent, and an intimate partner in love or marriage.
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Robert Karen is Assistant Clinical Professor at the Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Adelphi University; Adjunct Clinical Faculty, Postgraduate Training Program in Group Psychotherapy, Adelphi University.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. The classic text on the history of attachment theory and its impact on the field of child development, now in a fully expanded and updated edition. A century ago, leading childcare experts were miles apart in their recommendations to parents. Behaviorists warned against spoiling children with too much affection ("Never hug and kiss them, never let them sit in your lap") whereas geneticists argued that affection matters little because our genes alone determine who we are. Into this fray in the late 1930s stepped John Bowlby, the British psychoanalyst whose work with psychologist Mary Ainsworth would overturn the world of child development and shape its trajectory for the next 70 years. Becoming Attached tells the story of one of the great undertakings of modern psychology: the hundred-year quest to understand what children need and what constitutes good parenting. In this expanded and fully updated new edition, psychotherapist and journalist Robert Karen chronicles the origin of a groundbreaking idea - attachment theory - and its resounding impact on the fields of developmental psychology, psychiatry, and psychoanalysis. Karen charts the historic course of attachment theory as it gained notoriety and support-and not a little controversy. Do "securely attached" children fare better as adults than "insecurely attached" ones? What do children truly need to thrive? Can babies handle prolonged separations? Presenting the origin story of an important idea in child development, this new edition also reveals how attachment research has exploded worldwide in the past several years as evidence for the benefits of secure attachment continue to grow. Karen explores the cutting-edge science examining the relationship between infants and their caregivers - such as the hidden world of synchronized play, fMRI studies that reveal neural patterns of parental and receptive love, and the link between attachment and genetics, wherein early experience changes the expression of genes. Karen also tells a dramatic story of scientists at work and at war, what happens when a theory such as attachment becomes complicated by political and economic pressures, and how its entanglement with gender roles and equity in the workforce continue to overshadow research to this day. Karen shares anecdotes drawn from his own practice to illuminate the challenges many adults face in overcoming insecurities that may originate in infancy and childhood, and how resulting harmful relationship patterns may be quashed. Cementing its place as a classic text of child development and its rich history, Becoming Attached has much to say about both child and adult life, as readers will find it impossible to read without reflecting on their own lives as children, parents, and intimate partners in love or marriage. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780199398799
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