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Bowlby's Theory of Maternal Deprivation

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Bowlby's Theory of Maternal Deprivation
In this essay I intend to analyse the attachment theory of well-known British psychiatrist Dr John Bowlby. I will examine both the primary and secondary research behind the theory and look at some of the arguments against it before going on to explore the impact Bowlby’s research has had on the early years setting.

Edward John Mostyn Bowlby was born in London on February 26th 1907 to a fairly upper-middle class family. His parents were of the belief that too much parental affection would in fact spoil a child and therefore spent very little time with him, as little as one hour per day. His primary care-giver was the family nanny until, when he was four years old, the nanny left. Bowlby later described this as being:

“as tragic as the loss of a mother” (www.mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=doc&id=10104&cn=28)

He was then sent away to boarding school at the age of seven. It is therefore entirely comprehensible that he became increasingly sensitive to children’s suffering and how it appeared to be connected to their future mental health.
Bowlby began his study at Trinity College Cambridge where he studied psychology. He excelled academically and spent time working with delinquent children. He then went on to study medicine at University College Hospital and enrolled in the Institute of Psychoanalysis. Upon his graduation he began working at Maudesley Hospital as a psychoanalyst.
It was while studying medicine that he volunteered in a children’s residential home and began to develop his interest in children who appeared to him to be emotionally disturbed. While working in the residential home he encountered two particular children who intrigued him. The first of these was a very isolated, affectionless teenager who had no permanent, stable mother figure and the second was a young boy of seven or eight who followed Bowlby around constantly. This led him to speculate that there was a possible link between a child’s mental health problems and their early



Bibliography: www.mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=doc&id=10104&cn=28 Bowlby J. 1953. Child Care and the Growth of Love, 2nd ed, England, Pelican Books Davenport G.C 1994. An Introduction to Child Development, 2nd ed, London, Collins Educational www.eyfs.info/articles/article.php?Attachment-Theory-and-the-Key-Person-Approach-66 .

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