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Original Essays | February 8, 2012

Kent Hartman: IMG A Raider by Any Other Name



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Wire Mothers & Inanimate Arms: Harry Harlow and the Science of Love

by Jim Ottaviani

Wire Mothers & Inanimate Arms: Harry Harlow and the Science of Love Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Psychologists know best, of course, and in the 1950s they warned parents about the dangers of too much love. Besides, what was "love" anyway? Just a convenient name for children seeking food and adults seeking sex. It took an outsider scientist to challenge it. When Harry Harlow began his experiments on mother love he was more than just an outside the mainstream, though. He was a deeply unhappy man who knew in his gut the truth about what love - and its absence - meant, and set about to prove it. His experiments and results shocked the world, and Wire Mothers &Inanimate Arms will shock you as well.

Review:

"'This nonfiction graphic novel retelling psychologist Harry Harlow's famous experiments is as disturbing as it is excellent. 'We'll show you what love looks like — and what it does,' says the young researcher, as he turns to TV to make his case after regular scientists reject his experiments. Harlow showed that rhesus monkeys preferred the soft, cloth stuffed-animal mother over wire surrogates, even when nursed by the wire doll. The famous images of the scary 'cloth mother' and the even scarier 'wire mother' has great cultural weight, but the real drama of the story Ottaviani tells is the contemporary scientists who won't admit the word 'love' into their clinical language. Harlow's journey is tinged with subtle class and immigrant issues — the big-jawed, jowly figures, drawn with meaty shadows, express these divisions wonderfully, and help give Harlow emotional weight as he simultaneously finds success and sinks into alcoholism. The repetition of the term 'proximity,' how scientists explained away love, is chilling, and the largely forgotten Skinner boxes and the theories behind them give the work a sense of deep foreboding as a cautionary tale of how behaviorists once tried to declare affection to be scientifically unsound. (July)' Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Product Details

ISBN:
9780978803711
Author:
Ottaviani, Jim
Publisher:
G.T. Labs
Illustrator:
Meconis, Dylan
Subject:
General
Subject:
Nonfiction
Subject:
Comic books, strips, etc.
Subject:
Behavior
Subject:
Graphic Novels
Subject:
Graphic Novels-Nonfiction
Copyright:
Publication Date:
20070731
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Grade Level:
Young adult
Language:
English
Illustrations:
YES
Pages:
84
Dimensions:
9.06x6.05x.26 in. .39 lbs.

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Wire Mothers & Inanimate Arms: Harry Harlow and the Science of Love Used Trade Paper
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$5.95 In Stock
Product details 84 pages G.T. Labs - English 9780978803711 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "'This nonfiction graphic novel retelling psychologist Harry Harlow's famous experiments is as disturbing as it is excellent. 'We'll show you what love looks like — and what it does,' says the young researcher, as he turns to TV to make his case after regular scientists reject his experiments. Harlow showed that rhesus monkeys preferred the soft, cloth stuffed-animal mother over wire surrogates, even when nursed by the wire doll. The famous images of the scary 'cloth mother' and the even scarier 'wire mother' has great cultural weight, but the real drama of the story Ottaviani tells is the contemporary scientists who won't admit the word 'love' into their clinical language. Harlow's journey is tinged with subtle class and immigrant issues — the big-jawed, jowly figures, drawn with meaty shadows, express these divisions wonderfully, and help give Harlow emotional weight as he simultaneously finds success and sinks into alcoholism. The repetition of the term 'proximity,' how scientists explained away love, is chilling, and the largely forgotten Skinner boxes and the theories behind them give the work a sense of deep foreboding as a cautionary tale of how behaviorists once tried to declare affection to be scientifically unsound. (July)' Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
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