"Daniel N. Stern is a consummate baby watcher. His path-breaking video-based research into the intimate complexities of mother-infant interactions has had an enormous impact on psychotherapy and developmental psychology. His minute analyses of the give and take between mothers and babies have offered empirical support and correction for many theories of development. In the complex and unconscious choreography of "conversations" of smiles, gestures, and mutual gazing. Stern has discerned patterns of both emotional attunement and emotional "mismatching" that help predict the nature of children's later relationships with others." The First Relationship was the first book to reveal Stern's unique methods and observations. Written for parents as well as therapists and researchers, it offers the clearest distillation now available of Stern's key ideas and discoveries, and in a short space describes the major themes of his subsequent books and remarkable career.
محتوای کتاب به مطالعاتی در حوزه پژوهش راجع به ریزه کاری های تعامل مراقب و کودک در شش ماهه اول پرداخته، مطالب گاها آموزنده هستند و ارزش خوندن داره به نظرم منتها حتما زبان اصلی. ترجمه کتاب از مقصود خدایاری افتضاحه!
İçeriği faydalı olsa da sunuş biçimi okuyucuyu içine çeken bir tarzda değil. Anneler için pek çok yeni bilgi içerse de oldukça teknik bir kitap. İlişkiselliğe bilimsel, hatta evrimsel bir perspektiften yaklaşıyor. Gelişim üzerine yoğunlaşmış, daha çok evrimsel ve fizyolojik açıklamalara dayanan bir çalışma. Bu yüzden psikolojiden çok biyolojik temelli bir bakış açısı sunuyor.
Hours of observing film footage of mothers interacting with their infants led Stern to write that “the infant is a virtuoso performer in his attempts to regulate both the level of stimulation from the caregiver and the internal level of stimulation in himself. The mother is also a virtuoso in her moment-by-moment regulation of the interaction.” Each member of the dyad comes with a limited repertoire of expression: facial expressions, head movements and gurgles on the part of the infant, mirroring, repetition and exaggeration on the part of the mother, and yet “Together they evolve some exquisitely intricate dyadic patterns.”
This is a book I think first time parents ought to read...to gain a deeper understanding of the intuitive parenting skills they already possess. I can't help but think that somewhere along the way the "gaze" was broken for me, or perhaps, I never had the gaze-path to begin with. :( (Being told that on my first entry into the world that I "looked and looked and looked around.")
Read it around the birth of my first child. Rather academic but absolutely fascinating. The description of the mother-infant language helped me understand and appreciate our own experiences.