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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jane Milton (The Melanie Klein Trust, London, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.521kg ISBN: 9780367337896ISBN 10: 0367337894 Pages: 260 Publication Date: 25 February 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Foreword by John Steiner of the Melanie Klein Trust. Author Biographies Acknowledgements Editor’s Introduction Part 1: IN KLEIN’S OWN WORDS: Chapter 1: The need for psychoanalysis in certain types of difficult children (1936)Chapter 2: On Play (1937) Chapter 3: The importance of the unconscious mind for the whole personality (1939) Chapter 4: Sadness and Loss in the Emotional Life of the Young Child (1939) Chapter 5: Autobiography and reflections (1955 and 1959) PART 2: STUDIES FROM THE MELANIE KLEIN ARCHIVE Chapter 6: Melanie Klein’s contemporaneous references to Hitler and the Second World War in her therapeutic sessions. Claudia Frank Chapter 7: An unpublished contribution of Melanie Klein on reassurance. Claudia Frank Chapter 8: Melanie Klein’s unpublished ‘Don Juan’ paper. Claudia Frank Chapter 9: Melanie Klein and Repression: An examination of some unpublished notes of 1934. RD Hinshelwood Chapter 10: Melanie Klein and countertransference. RD Hinshelwood Chapter 11: The Elusive Concept of ‘Internal Objects’ RD Hinshelwood Chapter 12: Klein’s further thoughts on Loneliness. Jane Milton Chapter 13: Notes on ""Dick"" in the Melanie Klein archive. Maria Rhode"ReviewsThe publication of this volume of papers from the Klein archive, together with critical discussion by notable Klein scholars, is a most exciting event. Every chapter is of interest, not only for its historical significance, but also because Klein's clinical and theoretical thinking is further explored in the excellent commentaries and related to later developments in psychoanalysis. I recommend it most warmly. It forms an essential and impressive part of the array of recent books about Klein which attest to the continuing fertility of her legacy. Margaret Rustin, Honorary Consultant Child Psychotherapist, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, co-author of Reading Klein This volume adds significantly to our understanding of Melanie Klein, her thinking and her internal world. We see her as a child, powerless to prevent the losses inflicted on her family; longing for knowledge and for the power to reduce suffering. We learn of Klein's early defiance, a hint of the powerful thinker whose radical ideas were later to spark fierce debate across the psychoanalytic world. We are shown too, a softer, more vulnerable and less certain Klein. Melanie Klein's humanity shines out of the chapters in this book. Penelope Garvey, Training Analyst British Psychoanalytical Society The publication of this volume of papers from the Klein archive, together with critical discussion by notable Klein scholars, is a most exciting event.Every chapter is of interest, not only for its historical significance, but also because Klein's clinical and theoretical thinking is further explored in the excellent commentaries and related to later developments in psychoanalysis. I recommend it most warmly. It forms an essential and impressive part of the array of recent books about Klein which attest to the continuing fertility of her legacy. --Margaret Rustin, Honorary Consultant Child Psychotherapist, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, co-author of Reading Klein This volume adds significantly to our understanding of Melanie Klein, her thinking and her internal world. We see her as a child, powerless to prevent the losses inflicted on her family; longing for knowledge and for the power to reduce suffering. We learn of Klein's early defiance, a hint of the powerful thinker whose radical ideas were later to spark fierce debate across the psychoanalytic world. We are shown too, a softer, more vulnerable and less certain Klein. Melanie Klein's humanity shines out of the chapters in this book. Penelope Garvey, Training Analyst British Psychoanalytical Society The publication of this volume of papers from the Klein archive, together with critical discussion by notable Klein scholars, is a most exciting event.Every chapter is of interest, not only for its historical significance, but also because Klein's clinical and theoretical thinking is further explored in the excellent commentaries and related to later developments in psychoanalysis. I recommend it most warmly. It forms an essential and impressive part of the array of recent books about Klein which attest to the continuing fertility of her legacy. --Margaret Rustin, Honorary Consultant Child Psychotherapist, Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, co-author of Reading Klein Author InformationDr Jane Milton is a psychiatrist and a training analyst of the British Psychoanalytical Society. Having worked as a consultant psychiatrist at Kings College Hospital and the Tavistock Clinic, she is now in full-time psychoanalytic practice. She is archivist for the Melanie Klein Trust and has published books and papers on various psychoanalytic topics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |