MB529: Intercultural
Attachment (4 units)
Evelyne A. Reisacher, Adjunct
Assistant Professor of Islamic Studies
Fall 2003 Pasadena
DESCRIPTION:
This course explores the dynamics involved when people from different cultures interact with one another, the changes they undergo and what facilitates and hinders attachment. Attention is given to nonverbal communication at levels beneath awareness, the importance of connecting emotionally as well as intellectually across cultures, and how interactively to regulate emotions to facilitate healthy attachment. The course draws on the latest developments of attachment theory and uses Allan N. Schore’s developmental attachment theory as a framework to investigate intercultural attachment. It is designed for students with no previous psychological or neurobiological training to improve their understanding and skills in relating with people from other cultures.
LEARNING
OUTCOMES:
• Broadening of theoretical and methodological horizons
of intercultural interactions.
• Understanding of the theory of attachment and its importance for analyzing
intercultural relationships.
• Understanding of the principles of Schore’s developmental attachment theory
as they are integrated into intercultural studies.
• Gain conceptual tools and skills that will enhance intercultural attachment.
COURSE
FORMAT:
The course will be developed through lectures,
audio-visual presentations, and class interactions. Students will have the opportunity to reflect on their own
intercultural attachment experiences and engage in exercises and group work to
apply attachment principles. The course
is scheduled as a two-week intensive, but students will meet with Dr. Reisacher
in an orientation session during Week 1.
Assignments will be spread throughout the quarter.
REQUIRED
READING:
Reader articles and chapters of books used in class are:
Bretherton, Inge. “The Origin of Attachment Theory: John Bowlby and Mary
Ainsworth." Developmental
Psychology 28:759-775: 1992
Brewster Thomas E., and Elizabeth S. Brewster “Bonding and the Missionary Task:
Establishing a Sense of Belonging.”
Pasadena, CA: Lingua House: 1982.
Brueggemann, Walter “The Psalms and the Life of Faith.” Patrick D. Miller, ed. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press. 1995.
Finnegan, Ruth. “Communicating: The
Multiple Modes of Human Interconnection.”
New York: Routledge: 2002.
Schore. Allan N. “Attachment and the Regulation of the Right Brain.” Attachment
and Human Development 2 (1). Pp.
23-47: 2000.
2001 Minds in the Making: Attachment,
the Self-Organizing Brain, and Developmentally-Oriented Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy. British Journal of Psychotherapy 17(3). Pp 299-328.
Van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H., and Abraham Sagi.
1999. “Cross-Cultural Patterns
of Attachment: Universal and Contextual Dimensions.” In Handbook of Attachment. Jude Cassidy and Phillip R. Shaver,
eds. Pp. 713-734. New York: The Guilford Press.
RECOMMENDED
READING:
Cassidy, Jude, and Phillip R. Shaver, eds. Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research,
and Clinical Applications. New
York: The Guilford Press: 1999.
Clinton, Tim, and Gary Sibcy Attachments:
Why You Love, Feel and Act the Way You Do.
Brentwood, TN: Integrity Pub., 2002.
Harwood, Robin L., Joan G. Miller, and Nydia Lucca Irizarry Culture and Attachment: Perceptions of the
Child in Context. New York: The
Guilford Press: 1995.
Kitayama, Shinobu, and Hazel Rose Markus. Emotion
and Culture: Empirical Studies of Mutual Influence. Washington, D.C.:
American Psychological Association: 1997.
Reisacher, Evelyne Annick “The Processes
of Attachment Between the Algerians and French within the Christian Community
in France.” Ph. D.
Dissertation. Fuller Theological
Seminary, Pasadena, CA: 1991.
Schore, Allan, N. Affect Regulation and
the Origin of the Self: The Neurobiology of Emotional Development. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates:
1994.
ASSIGNMENTS:
1. The student is
required to read 1,500 pages from the reading list in the syllabus/reader,
and/or suggested bibliography.
2. Write a 1250 word (5 page) paper on student’s own intercultural attachment
history (must complete reading first)
3. 30 -minute interview with a person from a cultural background different from
student’s own.
4. 15 minute group presentation on intercultural attachment issues experienced
during class
5. A 2500 word (10 page) paper on integrating emotion bases attachment and
personal living or working context.
RELATIONSHIP
TO CURRICULUM: Elective.
PREREQUISITES: None.
FINAL
EXAMINATION: No written examination.
Last
Date Edited: June 9, 2003