This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
Emerging in the mid-twentieth century at the intersection of psychoanalytic thought, ethology, and systems theory, John Bowlby's work represented a decisive shift in the understanding of early relational life. Rejecting drive-reductionist explanations of infant-caregiver bonds, Bowlby advanced the radical proposition that attachment is an evolutionarily grounded behavioral system, organized around the infant's need for proximity to a protective figure and calibrated by environmental contingencies.
Attachment theory introduced a biologically informed account of emotional development, positing that early interactions with caregivers generate internal working models—cognitive-affective schemas that guide expectations about the self, others, and relationships across the lifespan. These models, formed within concrete relational contexts, become foundational for affect regulation, exploration, resilience, and vulnerability to psychopathology. In articulating these claims, Bowlby not only reframed debates within psychoanalysis but also catalyzed decades of empirical research, much of it further elaborated through Mary Ainsworth's observational studies and the development of attachment classifications.
This audiobook situates Bowlby's theory within its historical and intellectual contexts while critically engaging its conceptual architecture and empirical legacy. More than a retrospective account, this work approaches attachment theory as a living framework: one that continues to inform clinical practice, social policy, and interdisciplinary inquiry. By revisiting Bowlby's foundational insights and tracing their evolution, the volume aims to illuminate both the strengths and the necessary revisions of attachment theory, underscoring its ongoing relevance for understanding human development in relational context.