Abstract

Introduction - Susan Goldberg I. Origins and Context of Attachment Theory Something There Is That Doesn't Love a Wall: John Bowlby, Attachment Theory, and Psychoanalysis - Jeremy Holmes The Origins of Attachment Theory: John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth - Inge Bretherton The Evolution and History of Attachment Research and Theory - Klaus E. Grossmann The Developmental Perspectives of Attachment and Psychoanalytic Theory - Morris Eagle II. Contemporary Research The Origins of Attachment Security: Classical and Contextual Determinants - Jay Belsky, Kate Rosenberger, and KeithCrnic Infuence of Attachment Theory on Ethological Studies of Biobehavioral Development in Nonhuman Primates - Stephen J. Suomi Hidden Regulators: Implications for a New Understanding of Attachment, Separation, and Loss - Myron A. Hofer Part III: Clinical Significance and Applications of Attachment Attachment, the Reflective Self, and Borderline States: The Predictive Specificity of the Adult Attachment Interview and Pathological Emotional Development - Peter Fonagy, Miriam Steele, Howard Steele, Tom Leigh, Roger Kennedy, Gretta Mattoon, and Mary Target Child Maltreatment and Attachment Organization: Implications for Intervention - DanteCicchetti and Sheree L.Toth Attachment Organization and Vulnerability to Loss,Separation, and Abuse in Disturbed Adolescents - Kenneth S. Adam, Adrienne E. Sheldon Keller, and Malcolm West Disorganized/Disoriented Attachment in the Psychotherapy of the Dissociative Disorders - Giovanni Liotti IV. New Directions in Attachment Theory Attachment and Psychopathology - Patricia McKinsey Crittenden Recent Studies in Attachment: Overviews, with Selected Implications for Clinical Work - Mary Main

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