A brief introduction to neo-Freudian psychologist Melanie Klein and her work....
Description
Melanie Klein
Short bio • Austrian (like Freud) • Born in 1882 (26 years after Freud) • First discovered Freud in 1910, when she read his book On Dreams. Became a fan.
• Became increasingly interested in psychology and the psychoanalytical theory. Joined the Budapest Society.
How did Klein’s own experiences affect her work?
• Two of Klein’s siblings died at relatively young ages.
• Klein’s mother died when she was 18.
Melanie Klein’s Ideas -Strong focus on childhood -Contributed to the object relations theory -Environment -Theories based on a lot of observation
Klein’s theory concerning the psyche revolves around two main states, or positions of the mind.
Paranoid Schizoid Position
• The child categorizes everything around it into two categories: the good and the bad.
• The child cannot deal with things that concern it, as its ego is not yet fully developed.
• These things that concern it may be perceived threats from the exterior, or troubling feelings in its own mind.
• The child categorizes everything around it into two categories: the good and the bad. What satisfies it is good, and what doesn’t is bad. The baby acts accordingly.
Depressive position
• “One would realize that the mother that one hated was also the mother that one loved” (Woolf)
• The child gains the ability to see that the one that it hates is also the one that provides care. This is a major milestone in the development of the child’s psyche, and indicated a developing ego.
• The child no longer separates everything into the “good” and “bad” categories. This enables the formation of a more realistic view of the world.
Other interesting ideas
Toys •
Klein developed the concept of play therapy during World War I.
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She believed that children would express their innermost feelings through their actions with toys.
Envy •
Part of the infant’s primal thought process.
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The infant feels that the mother’s breast is the ultimate source of nutrition, pleasure and is full of power.
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When the infant cannot immediately obtain the breast, it feels that the breast is keeping it’s resources for itself. This is envy.
Bibliography
• Grosskurth, P. (1986). Melanie Klein: Her world and her work. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
• Segal, H. (1980). Melanie Klein. New York: The Viking Press.
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