Mother love/mother hate

Mother love/mother hate1995
About this book
Many a loving mother has had fleeting feelings of hatred toward her children - the desire to hurl a howling baby out the window or to lock a teenager out of the house. In this provocative book, Rozsika Parker argues that these ambivalent feelings not only are common but can actually have a creative impact on mothering.
Mother Love/Mother Hate boldly illustrates how a mother's desire for devotion coexists with the impulse to hurt and desert. Parents will find Parker's insight into the conflicts that beset them illuminating and deeply reassuring. Reversing the conventional psychoanalytic approach, in which maternal ambivalence has been understood chiefly from the point of view of the child, this book gives precedence to the mother's perspective.
Drawing on interviews with mothers, clinical material from her practice as a psychoanalytic psychotherapist, and a wide range of psychoanalytic and literary sources (including Virginia Woolf, Anne Tyler, Simone de Beauvoir, D. W. Winnicott, Melanie Klein, and John Bowlby), Parker explores experiences of maternal ambivalence in a culture painfully and profoundly uneasy about its very existence.
Details
- First published
- 1995
- OL Work ID
- OL2812250W
Subjects
AmbivalenceLove, MaternalMaternal LoveMother and childMotherhoodMothersPsychological aspectsPsychological aspects of MotherhoodPsychologyMother-Child RelationsPsychoanalytic TheoryMothers -- PsychologyMotherhood -- Psychological aspects