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9781572302464 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Culture and Attachment

Perceptions of the Child in Context
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Bridging the fields of culture and attachement, this book seeks to illuminate the relationship between the fields in two ways: It examines attachment from the perspective of culture, and then evaluates two different cultures (Anglo and Puerto Rican) from the vantage point of mothers perceptions of attachment behaviour. In doing so the volume aims to help interpret the results of cross-cultural attachment studies. The authors use qualitative and quantitative methods to provide an in-depth view of desirable child behaviour and long-term socialization goals among Anglo and Puerto Rican mothers of infants and toddlers. The volume also explores cultural differences in the perception by these mothers of what contitutes a "good child". Drawing on research, the authors discuss the mental health meanings of certain behaviours in the context of larger environmental demands. This book examines the conditions under which socio-emotional functioning in infancy, as indexed by quality of attachment, can be said to predict the development of later social and emotional competence.

Attachment theory and its role in the study of human development and theories of culture; studying culture and attachment - a symbolic approach; images of the child - autonomy and relatedness; images of the child - respect and affection; culture and socio-economic status; attachment, culture and behaviour. Appendix: vignettes of strange situation behaviour used in study.

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