Griffith Review 48: Attachment Styles
By (Author) Debra Oswald
Contributions by Richard Glover
Contributions by Danny M. Lavery
Contributions by Ahona Guha
Contributions by Bianca Valentino
Contributions by Hsu-Ming Teo
Edited by Carody Culver
84
Griffith REVIEW
Griffith REVIEW
7th May 2024
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Sociology: family and relationships
Paperback
196
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
The attachments we form shape our experience of the world and our understanding of who we are. Hell is other people', wrote Jean-Paul Sartre, his point being less about misanthropy and more about how entwined our self-perception is with the ways in which others perceive us. And alongside our personal relationships from filial to friendship, from collegiate to romantic sit the complex emotional connections we form with places, ideas and objects.
How do we navigate these varying attachments, and what can they offer us when our lives are so mediated by technology Can we break free of the tropes and traps associated with our most primal relationships: the social expectations of motherhood, the burdens of filial duty, the complexities of infidelity