Over the past three decades, no one has been more successful in building bridges between academic developmental research and contemporary psychoanalytic theory and practice than Beatrice Beebe and Frank Lachmann. This is the case because there is a perfect match these authors' focus on the impact of early mother-infant interaction patterns and contemporary psychoanalysis's emphasis on the constitutive relational contexts of all things clinical. The Origins of Attachment: Infant Research and Adult Treatment is a beautiful and persuasive case in point, documenting how patterns of relatedness between mother and infant provide parallels and analogies for patient-therapist face-to-face interactions in the adult treatment setting. I highly recommend this book to any psychoanalytic therapist who wishes to find an empirical research grounding for his or her clinical thinking and work. - Robert D. Stolorow, PhD, Author, World, Affectivity, Trauma: Heidegger and Post-Cartesian Psychoanalysis (Routledge, 2011)
This, book, rooted in one of the most influential and creative research programs in our field, demonstrates in rare fashion how developmental research can contribute significantly to therapeutic practice, not only with mothers and infants but with adults. Showing a noteworthy appreciation of the ways that unconscious processes can be coded at the procedural rather than declarative level and of the ways that the shaping of personal experience is ongoingly mutual and reciprocal, not simply a matter of once and for all internalizations, this is a book that will reward reading and re-reading by researchers and clinicians alike. - Paul L. Wachtel is CUNY Distinguished Professor at City College and the CUNY Graduate Center
The study of how communication begins... included the wonderful range of non-verbal communication that is described by the authors. The subtleties and complexities of non-verbal communication are central to their work and the impact of infant research on psychoanalytic theory and practice... An excellent review of the breadth of current understanding of infant capcities is included... To sustain a dyadic systems point of view, to describe both and one at a time, or in Beebe and Lachmann's terms, self-regulation and interactive regulation, is nearly an impossible linguistic accomplishment!... The clinical work that is included in this volume provides concrete evidence of this hope, and of the hard work that can be involved in realizing it. This book is avaluable addition to any library for the summary of infant research it provides, and the possibilities for change through treatment that it champions. -Nancy Freeman-Carroll, PsyD, American Journal of Psychoanalysis
The Origins of Attachment: Infant Research and Adult Treatment accentuates the sceience-practice relationship at large, and further shores up the academic link between analytic theories and treatments. Exemplar investigators Beatrice Beebe and Frank Lachmann demonstrate the successful marriage between careful laboratory examiniation of attachment phenomena, adult pathology, and psychotherapy. The premise of the text successfully (and empirically) establishes the importance of earliest relational experiences to later psychological functioning by using a sophisticated experimental methodology not readily seen in clinical psychology or psycholoanalysis. As such, The Origins of Attachment provides a comprehnsive scientific investigation of the genesis of secure and insecure attachment styles, proactively opening up otherwise tenebrous theoretical concepts to empirical examination in ways not previously attempted... Scientists and those appreciative of research will surely value the brilliant methodology of the text... The Origins of Attachment will unquestionably illustrate the clinical utility of psychological science to even the most skeptical of psychotherapists... [This] is a book highly recommended to facilitate an appreciation of the blending of the natural science model with analytic treatments. -Anthony F. Tasso, Division|Review
The book is packed with a wealth of findings from various other studies, as well as the microanalyses for this one, with very detailed comparisons made between future secure, future resistant, and future disorganised infants at four months old....This remarkable book is a rich source of learning for parent-infant, child, and adult psychotherapists, psychologists, and those working with families, confirming through carefully documented research what many may have already intuitively known and practised. - Alexandra Maeja Raicar, Attachment
Over the past three decades, no one has been more successful in building bridges between academic developmental research and contemporary psychoanalytic theory and practice than Beatrice Beebe and Frank Lachmann. This is the case because there is a perfect match these authors' focus on the impact of early mother-infant interaction patterns and contemporary psychoanalysis's emphasis on the constitutive relational contexts of all things clinical. The Origins of Attachment: Infant Research and Adult Treatment is a beautiful and persuasive case in point, documenting how patterns of relatedness between mother and infant provide parallels and analogies for patient-therapist face-to-face interactions in the adult treatment setting. I highly recommend this book to any psychoanalytic therapist who wishes to find an empirical research grounding for his or her clinical thinking and work. - Robert D. Stolorow, PhD, Author, World, Affectivity, Trauma: Heidegger and Post-Cartesian Psychoanalysis (Routledge, 2011)
This, book, rooted in one of the most influential and creative research programs in our field, demonstrates in rare fashion how developmental research can contribute significantly to therapeutic practice, not only with mothers and infants but with adults. Showing a noteworthy appreciation of the ways that unconscious processes can be coded at the procedural rather than declarative level and of the ways that the shaping of personal experience is ongoingly mutual and reciprocal, not simply a matter of once and for all internalizations, this is a book that will reward reading and re-reading by researchers and clinicians alike. - Paul L. Wachtel is CUNY Distinguished Professor at City College and the CUNY Graduate Center