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The Development and Organization of Meaning

The Development and Organization of Meaning

The Development and Organization of Meaning

How Individual Worldviews Develop in Relationships
L. Alan Sroufe, University of Minnesota
June Sroufe
June 2025
Not yet published - available from June 2025
Paperback
9781009385442

    Drawing from extensive developmental research, this book highlights the significance of meaning in shaping individual worldviews within relationships, from infancy onwards. By focusing on behavior and experience, it reshapes our understanding of pertinent psychological phenomena, tracing the emergence of self, self-regulation, causality comprehension, peer relationships, adolescent experiences, and lifelong adaptation. Using developmental psychology and compelling clinical cases, the authors emphasize the central role of 'meaning' as a unifying theme, addressing diverse topics such as resilience, intergenerational behavior patterns, trauma impacts, and existential meaning. Ideal for students and professionals in psychology, counselling, and social work, as well as researchers and clinicians in related fields, this book integrates existing theories and empirical evidence to illuminate various aspects of human development and adaptation.

    • Illustrates how meaning illuminates psychological phenomena, offering a new lens for research and practice
    • Provides a comprehensive overview of development from infancy to adulthood, making complexities understandable across fields
    • Integrates meaning and development research into a single narrative

    Reviews & endorsements

    'The Development and Organization of Meaning is a joy to read. It is incredibly clear and accessible. At the same time, the book offers a profound perspective on fundamental questions about how people develop and the meaning we make of our own lives and our connections with others.' Robbie Duschinsky, Professor of Social Science and Health, University of Cambridge, UK

    'L. Alan Sroufe is one of the most insightful and important child psychologists in the world. This brilliant book is a must-read for anyone interested in how children develop.' Johann Hari, author of Stolen Focus and Lost Connections

    'This wonderful book, robustly grounded in rigorous theoretical, empirical, and clinical scholarship, proposes an original, fresh, and innovative unifying theme: the construct of 'meaning'. The creative synthesis of vast research in developmental psychology and psychopathology through this unique lens is inspiring and thought provoking. Highly recommended!' Grazyna Kochanska, Dewey B. Stuit Professor, University of Iowa, USA

    'How do we become the person we are?  How do we come to see the world and the people in it the way we do? How do we make meaning of our lives? These profound questions anchor Alan and June Sroufe's brilliant and elegant synthesis of 50 years of groundbreaking developmental and clinical study. As human beings, searching for and finding meaning is who we are. And, as the Sroufes so beautifully demonstrate, it is our earliest experiences with those who care for us, experiences of being loved or neglected, seen or unseen, cherished or abandoned that shape our capacity to love, hope, and create, across decades and generations. We make – as did our forebears, and as will our children – meaning from what we have known.' Arietta Slade, Professor Adjunct, Yale Child Study Center, USA

    'This book will not be surpassed for a lifetime. Alan and June Sroufe's volume belongs alongside the work of Erik Erikson, John Flavell, Louis Breger, John Bowlby, Mary Ainsworth, Seymour Epstein, and Michael Tomasello, who opened our eyes to the fundamental questions: what are the development of thought, emotion, and relationships the development of, and how are they related?' Everett Waters, Emeritus Professor of Psychology, Stony Brook University, USA

    'From cradle to grave, it is this search for meaning that guides individual development.' So write L. Alan Sroufe and June Sroufe in this rich and compelling exploration of the development of meaning across the lifespan. Alan, a premier attachment theorist and researcher, and June, a profoundly wise clinician, guide us from infancy through adulthood, illuminating the profound ways in which we seek and construct meaning in our lives. As always, Sroufe and Sroufe's writing is sublime.' Mary Dozier, Unidel Amy E. du Pont Chair and Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Delaware, USA

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    Product details

    May 2025
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009385466
    0 pages
    Not yet published - available from May 2025

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Part I. The Beginning of Meaning:
    • 1. The place of meaning
    • 2. Four features of meaning and its development
    • 3. The cradle of meaning
    • 4. Attachment theory: the rise of meaning in psychology
    • 5. Toddlerhood: the meaning of me
    • Part II. The Growth of Meaning:
    • 6. The preschooler: the emergence of the person
    • 7. Middle childhood: me and my friends
    • 8. Adolescence:finding personal meaning
    • Part III. The Organized and Organizing Nature of Meaning:
    • 9. Meaning as the currency of development
    • 10. The role of meaning in intergenerational transmission effects
    • 11. Competence, resilience, and the fate of early experience
    • Part IV. Meaning and Disturbance:
    • 12. On the meaningfulness of disturbance
    • 13. Trauma and meaning
    • Part V. Integration and Conclusion:
    • 14. Integration
    • 15. Conclusion
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Authors
    • L. Alan Sroufe , University of Minnesota

      Alan Sroufe Ph.D., Professor Emeritus at the University of Minnesota, is a renowned expert in emotional development and developmental psychopathology. With eight books and 160 articles on these subjects, he has received numerous awards, including the Distinguished Scientist Award from the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) and the Mentor Award from the Developmental Psychology Division of the American Psychological Association.

    • June Sroufe

      June Sroufe Ph.D., is a family and child therapist, she specializes in relationship theory and clinical uses of the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). With eight published articles, she is recognized for her expertise in family functioning and AAI applications.