Bowlby

’s Deprivation Essay, Research Paper


In his hypothesis, Bowlby believed that an infant?s failure to attach to a


primary caregiver would have long term effects. This essay will attempt to


evaluate Bowlby?s deprivation hypothesis. Firstly, the terms ?attachment?


and ?deprivation? will be defined. Following that, a full definition of the


hypothesis will be made, and then an attempt will be made to describe and


understand the studies and period of history that lead to Bowlby?s ideas and


the influence they generated. A full evaluation will be made of his deprivation


hypothesis, including detailed criticisms of his theory. Finally, conclusions


will be drawn to show if Bowlby?s deprivation hypothesis can still retain any


credibility. The first task is to define the terms attachment and deprivation.


In 1973 the leading attachment psychologist, Mary Ainsworth, pointed out that


?Attachment is an affectional tie that one person forms to another person,


binding them together in space, and enduring over time?. Deprivation can occur


when there is insufficient opportunity for interaction with a mother figure


(privation), when there is insufficient interaction with mother (masked


deprivation), or when there are repeated breaches of ties with mother figures.


In 1949, the World Health Organisation became concerned about the number of


homeless children, or children who were growing up in institutions as a result


of the war years. They commissioned Bowlby to look into this matter, and to


report to them whether these children were likely to be suffering from their


experiences, and what the best kind of upbringing for such children was. Bowlby


concluded that a warm intimate and continuing relationship with a mother figure


is an essential precondition for mental health. Maternal deprivation or a


disturbed emotional attachment between mother and child was said to cause


irreparable damage, not only to the child but also to society as a whole. He


stated (1951) ?deprived children, whether in their own homes or not, are a


source of social infection as real and serious as are carriers of diphtheria and


typhoid?. Bowlby?s report to the WHO had a great deal of influence among


health care officials, social workers, and parents. But the conclusions he came


to were very controversial and caused arguments right from the very beginning.


Contrary to behaviourists and Freudians, who thought that physical comfort was a


caregiver?s primary concern, Bowlby (1951) suggested that emotional care was


at least equally important. He states that ?maternal attachment is as


essential for healthy psychological development as vitamins and minerals are for


physical health?. Bowlby (1951) also proposed the concept of monotropy, that


is the need for one central caregiver, usually the mother, but alternatively the


father or another person. Finally, Bowlby (1951) felt that there was a critical


period in the formation of attachments. He believed that children who experience


maternal deprivation below the age of four will suffer permanent damage. Three


landmark studies conducted in the 1950s supported his views. In 1946, Bowlby


looked at the life histories of eighty-eight children who had been referred to


his psychiatric clinic, half of whom had a criminal record for theft. Fourteen


of the ?thieves? displayed an ?affectionless? character, that is, a lack


of normal affection, shame or sense of responsibility. Almost all of these


affectionless children (eighty-six per cent of them) had suffered ?early and


prolonged separations from their mothers?. In practice, this meant that, at


least before the age of two, these children had continually or repeatedly been


in foster homes or hospitals, often not visited by their families. Of the


remaining seventy-four children who were not affectionless, only seven (one per


cent) had been separated. This appears to be strong evidence in support of


Bowlby’? hypothesis, but the data was retrospective and, more importantly,


correlational. It can not be assumed whether the maladjustment was caused by the


separations themselves or if there was a third factor responsible for both


maladjustment and separations, for example general family discord could be cause


of both. This was one of Rutter?s criticisms, which will be discussed later,


in further detail. More support for Bowlby?s views came from a piece of


classic research conducted by Lorenz (1935). In this study, Lorenz became


?mother?? to a brood of goslings. It was already known that many birds


attach themselves to the first figure they see upon hatching and persist in this


attachment, and Lorenz?s work confirmed this. The phenomenon is called


imprinting, an ethological concept taken from embryology. During pre-natal


development, there are short periods when an individual is especially


vulnerable. These times are called ?critical pe

riods?, and the effect is an


imprint. Imprinting is an example of an instinct, an inherited behaviour pattern


that predisposes an individual to certain forms of learning at critical times in


development. Bowlby suggested that attachment behaviour is a kind of imprinting


and is irreversible. However, in more recent studies of adopted children, Tizard


(1977) have found that older children can form satisfactory new relationships


with adults despite the lack of earlier attachment. A third line of evidence


came from Harlow?s work with rhesus monkeys (1959), an experiment was devised


where a monkey was provided with two ?mothers?, one a wire cylinder with a


monkey-like face and a feeding bottle attached, the other with no feeding bottle


but wrapped in a cloth. The position taken by behaviourists and Freudians (Gleitman


etc 1988????) would be that the monkeys should become attached to the


?mother? that offered food rather than comfort. In fact, the monkeys spent


most of their time with the cloth mother, visiting the other one only for food.


When they were frightened, they always went to the cloth mother. In later life,


the monkeys raised without a responsive mother became socially maladjusted and


had difficulty with mating and parenting. When considering Harlow?s research,


it could be argued that making generalisations from animal to human behaviour is


not always appropriate. (REF). Behaviourists argue that the difference between


human and non-human species are quantitative rather than qualitative, but other


psychologists believe that certain unique features of the human species (such as


consciousness and language) mean that non-human animal research has limited


applicability. REF Harlow?s research has also been criticised in terms of the


ethics of allowing animals to be manipulated in this way. Such criticism could


also be applied to Lorenz?s work with goslings. Schaffer and Emerson (1964)


challenged some of Bowlby?s claims. They found attachment to a specific person


started to occur at around 7 months, but multiple attachments were the norm. For


many the attachment to the mother was at the top of the hierarchy, but for


others the main attachment was to the father. They also found the strength of


attachment was not related to the length of time spent with the child, or to


basic caretaking functions of feeding etc., being fulfilled. It was the quality


and intensity of interaction that was important. Studies of Kibbutzs support


this as despite multiple mothering their primary attachment were still with


their parents (Sagi et al, 1978). Therefore, these studies do not support the


behaviourists of Freud as both theories state feeding is important for


attachment to occur. These findings suggest that Bowlby was correct in


identifying the importance of attachment, but incorrect in overemphasising the


single maternal role and the time factor for all children. Attachment, however


is only one part of his theory. Another part relates to the effects of


deprivation. Rutter (1981) felt that the main problem with the concept of


maternal deprivation was that it muddled together a range of essentially


different experiences. He felt that separation is not the crucial factor in


emotional disturbance. Instead, it may be that general family discord underlies


the emotional disturbances observed by Bowlby. It may also be that affectionless


psychopathy is due to the initial failure to form attachments (privation) rather


than attachment disruption (deprivation). Finally, situations where children


experience deprivation, such as short hospital stays, may create emotional


disturbance because of the strange and frightening environment as much as the


separation and interference with attachments. Bowlby?s reliance on


retrospective studies linking caregiver separation with delinquency cannot be


seen as establishing a causal link between the two. It is equally possible that


factors other than the absence of the mother (lack of parental supervision for


example) could have been responsible for the delinquency. Rutter (1981) found


that it was the circumstances surrounding the loss that was most likely to


determine the consequences rather than the loss per se. Bowlby?s deprivation


hypothesis was important in changing our view of early emotional behaviour from


one of dependency, the behaviourist and Freudian view, to one where the infant


is an active participant in eliciting care. The criticisms served to refine this


theory in several important ways: to include multiple attachments, to place less


emphasis on mother-love and to distinguish between different kinds of


deprivation. McFaydon (1994) suggests that many critics ?seem almost to have


got stuck in a time warp, hanging on to [Bowlby?s] early ideas, which were of


course extremely controversial but also important and influential at the


time?.

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