A sense of self : the work of affirmation

Bibliographic Information

A sense of self : the work of affirmation

Thomas J. Cottle

University of Massachusetts Press, c2003

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Note

Bibliography: p. 193-209

Contents of Works
  • The act of affirmation
  • The relational aspect of affirmation
  • The gaze of affirmation
  • The miraculous stranger
  • The construction of affirmation
  • Average, expectable environments
  • The affirmation curriculum
Description and Table of Contents

Description

An exploration of the crucial role of affirmation in human development; A clinical psychologist as well as a sociologist, Thomas J. Cottle is the author of more than twenty-five books. At the heart of his work is a concern with the problems confronted by ordinary people in their everyday lives, the kinds of issues that shape who we are and how we interact with the world around us. In this book, his focus is on affirmation, that mysterious process by which the self comes to know itself in relation to others and forges an identity. What is it that we experience when we are affirmed, Cottle asks, and what are the ramifications of affirmation, or the lack of it, in how we lead our lives? In pursuing his investigation, Cottle draws on a remarkably broad range of social scientific and philosophical literature, from Piaget and Kohut to Nietzsche and Levinas. Looking closely at the relationship between the individual, the family, and society, he explores issues of intimacy, morality, ethics, aesthetics, and socialization. He pays particular attention to the role of devotion, showing how the act of taking responsibility for another is the essence of affirmation, which in turn is the fundamental ingredient in the development of a self. Without those who take responsibility for us and commit themselves to us forever, he argues, there can be no secure sense of self and no genuine capacity for self-reflection and self-knowledge. Cottle concludes by emphasizing how much is at stake in the work of affirmation. Just as the affirming gaze of another nurtures and strengthens one's sense of self, the absence of affirmation - what we might call disaffirmation - can lead to a life of despair, alienation, and even violence.

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