000 02830nam a2200253 i 4500
003 MIUC
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008 170721s1998 enk |||| |||| 001 | eng d
020 _a9780712666213
040 _aMIUC
_beng
_cMIUC
082 0 _a155.4
100 1 _93291
_aBowlby, John
245 1 0 _aAttachment and loss.
_nVolume 2.
_pSeparation : anger and anxiety /
_cJohn Bowlby.
260 _aLondon :
_bPimlico,
_c1998.
300 _a503 p. ;
_c22 cm.
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
490 0 _aPimlico ;
_v282
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _aPt. 1. Security, anxiety, and distress -- Ch. 1. Prototypes of human sorrow -- Ch. 2. The place of separation and loss in psychopathology -- Ch. 3. Behaviour with and without mother: Human -- Ch. 4. Behaviour with and without mother: Non-human -- Pt. 2. An ethological approach to human fear -- Ch. 5. Basic postulates in theories of anxiety and fear -- Ch. 6. Forms of behaviour indicative of fear -- Ch. 7. Situations that arouse fear in humans -- Ch. 8. Situations that arouse fear in animals -- Ch. 9. Natural clues to danger and safety -- Ch. 10. Natural clues, cultural clues, and the assessment -- Ch. 11. Rationalization, misattribution, and projection -- Ch. 12. Fear of separation -- Pt. 3. Individual differences in susceptibility to fear: anxious attachment -- Ch. 13. Some variables responsible for individual differences -- Ch. 14. Susceptibility to fear and the availability of attachment figures -- Ch. 15. Anxious attachment and some conditions that promote it -- Ch. 16. 'Overdependency' and the theory of spoiling -- Ch. 17. Anger, anxiety, and attachment -- Ch. 18. Anxious attachment and the 'phobias' of childhood -- Ch. 19. Anxious attachment and 'agoraphobia' -- Ch. 20. Omission, suppression, and falsification of family context -- Ch. 21. Secure attachment and the growth of self-reliance -- Ch. 22. Pathways for the growth of personality.
520 _aSeparation, the second volume of Attachment and Loss, continues John Bowlby's influential work on the importance of the parental relationship to mental health. Here he considers separation and the anxiety that accompanies it: the fear of imminent or anticipated separation, the fear induced by parental threats of separation, and the inversion of the parent-child relationship. Dr Bowlby re-examines the situations that cause us to feel fear and compares them with evidence from animals. He concludes that fear is initially aroused by certain elemental situations - sudden movement, darkness or separation - which, although intrinsically harmless, are indicative of an increased risk of danger.
650 0 _93292
_aMaternal deprivation
650 0 _93297
_aSeparation anxiety in children
942 _2ddc
_cBK