The Earliest Relationship: Parents, Infants and the Drama of Early Attachment

The Earliest Relationship: Parents, Infants and the Drama of Early Attachment

by T. Berry Brazelton (Author), Bertrand G. Cramer (Author)

Synopsis

Never before has research on newborn behavior and parent-infant interaction been fully integrated with psychoanalytic insight into parents' emotions and fantasies. This book provide a vivid glimpse of the parents' daydreams and narcissistic wishes which grow into a desire for a child, and they show how these feelings develop into important attachments to the unborn infant during pregnancy. The power and competence of the newborn born then challenges parental fantasies, desires, wishes and expectations, creating the beginnings of the bond between parent and child. Using the latest research, the authors clarify all the ways the infant participates in the dawning relationship and the ingredients of very early communication and interaction. They then unveil the imaginary interactions which lend meaning and drama to each gesture and expression. We see the baby as Tyrant, as Savior, or as the reincarnation of lost relationships. Everyone who cares for mothers and babies-pediatricians, developmental and clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, early childhood specialists, nurses and social workers-as well as interested parents, will find this book of immediate value.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 270
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 01 Jan 1991

ISBN 10: 1855750058
ISBN 13: 9781855750050

Media Reviews
'This long awaited and much-needed work not only provides a unique dual focus on pregnancy and the very earliest stages of infancy, but integrates the ideas of two truly outstanding contributors to the field of infant work. Berry Brazelton, the pioneer in identifying individual differences and organizing capacities in early infancy, now brings his years of experience and wisdom into the most challenging clinical context. Bert Cramer, an internationally recognized psychoanalyst and researcher, brings his depth-psychological approach to infant-caregiver patterns, making possible a remarkable collaboration.'- Stanley Greenspan, M.D., George Washington University Medical School