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Attachment

Second Edition

Contributors

By John Bowlby

Formats and Prices

On Sale
Sep 23, 1983
Page Count
464 pages
Publisher
Basic Books
ISBN-13
9780465005437

Price

$26.99

Price

$34.99 CAD

Format

Format:

  1. Trade Paperback $26.99 $34.99 CAD
  2. ebook $17.99

This first volume of John Bowlby’s Attachment and Loss series examines the nature of the child’s ties to the mother. Beginning with a discussion of instinctive behavior, its causation, functioning, and ontogeny, Bowlby proceeds to a theoretical formulation of attachment behavior—how it develops, how it is maintained, what functions it fulfills.In the fifteen years since Attachment was first published, there have been major developments in both theoretical discussion and empirical research on attachment. The second edition, with two wholly new chapters and substantial revisions, incorporates these developments and assesses their importance to attachment theory.

  • “One of the most influential books of the century.”
    Stephen A. Mitchell
  • “[Attachment] is an exhaustive, closely reasoned study with numerous fascinating bypaths…an excellent definitive work of great importance.”
    The New York Times
  • “It seems almost incredible that, until Bowlby, no one had placed attachment at the center of human development.”
    Daniel N. Stern
  • “This great work, to paraphrase Goethe, stands as new as on its founding day. Indeed, one of the most outstanding features of Bowlby's trilogy is that it remains undated, thirty years after its original publication. Moreover, and remarkably, all three volumes are even now sources for state-of-the-art research in attachment. Rereading them reveals that more than a few ideas some of us have considered new (including some of my own) appeared first in these pages.”
    Mary Main
  • “Bowlby's focus on attachment relationships blazed a new path for late twentieth-century developmentalists, psychiatrists and psychotherapists. Historians of science will place Bowlby with Freud, Darwin and Lorenz in redefining the role of the person in his social context, and his work—like that of all truly great authors—must be read in the original: its richness and foresight are breathtaking.
    In terms of bridging the epistemologies of natural science and psychotherapy, it stands alone; its value increases by the day as discovery upon discovery confirms the basic truth of his insights. No modern researcher on child development, no healer of minds troubled by adversity in childhood, can afford to work in ignorance of Bowlby's writings.”
    Peter Fonagy
  • “Bowlby has done for attachment what Dickens did for poverty by shining his spotlight on an underrepresented universal phenomenon—the human propensity to form affectional bonds and the consequences of their loss and disruption. By mapping the largely uncharted terrain of parent-child attachments and identifying their major configurations (secure and insecure), he has irreversibly reshaped our conceptions of normal and pathological development. Bowlby's work has inspired a generation of developmental researchers as well as a growing number of clinicians who find that attachment theory illuminates both the therapeutic relationship and the therapeutic process. It will remain pivotal to any serious debate on human development.”
    Diana Diamond

John Bowlby

About the Author

John Bowlby is honorary staff member of the Tavistock Clinic in London.

Learn more about this author