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OverviewWhile much writing has been devoted, predominantly by contemporary Kleinian adult psychoanalysts, to the Kleinian and post Kleinian development of Klein's work, comparatively little has recently been written about the ongoing importance and character of Klein's clinical work for contemporary psychoanalytic psychotherapy or analysis with very small children (2 - 6 year olds). Little attention now seems to be paid to the revolutionary character of her work from the start (in the early 1920s) with this age group and its challenges, still relevant today, or to her recognition of the importance of mother-infant relations in the period long before World War II brought investigation into and understanding of problems of attachment, separation and loss. This book addresses these issues and re-explores Klein's work in these (and other) areas. This book is concerned primarily with Klein's work with pre-latency children and aims to give these small children more of the voice today that Melanie Klein herself discovered. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Susan Sherwin-WhitePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.690kg ISBN: 9780367103651ISBN 10: 0367103656 Pages: 284 Publication Date: 14 June 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , 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 ContentsSeries Editors’ Preface , Foreword , Introduction , Early background , Controversy and challenges in pioneering the analysis of very young children in the 1920s , Klein’s early pre-school and young child cases: the invention and development of a technique for child analysis , Restoring Klein’s concept of reparation in her early work , The negative transference and young children in analysis: new dimensions , The early stages of young-child analysis: Grete on the couch , Rita: the first very young child in psychoanalysis , Erna and her siblings: young-child analysis in the consulting room , Klein’s work with parents , Endings and outcomes , Incidence of Wiedergutmachung and Wiedergutmachungstendenzen in The Psycho-Analysis of Children (1932)ReviewsThis book addresses in a most compelling and readable way Melanie Klein's groundbreaking work with very small children, setting this in a biographical and historical context within psychoanalysis. Klein's recognition of the vital importance of the mother-infant relationship long predated mid-twentieth-century discoveries about attachment and loss, and her analyses of small children led to fundamental discoveries about the inner world which still inform contemporary psychoanalytic work. Sherwin-White uses both Klein's published work and previously unseen archival material, drawing also on the seminal work of Claudia Frank, in what will be a valuable contribution to Klein scholarship. -- (06/16/2017) Melanie Klein Revisited focuses on Klein's most revolutionary work, her bold inquiry into primitive states of mind in the infant and young child, those which are far beyond the reach of conscious memory. This book brings the reader's attention back in close focus to Klein's work with little children and the theoretical conclusions she drew from it. Here Susan Sherwin-White deploys her scholarly capacity on behalf of child analysts and child psychotherapists, as well as all those with an interest in psychoanalytic thinking. Her account of Klein's thought is based upon investigation not only of Klein's published work and what is known about Klein's life, but also on the archive held at the Wellcome Library for the History of Medicine. Light from these original researches constantly illuminates the known ground of Klein's most controversial works. This book helps us realise afresh the courage of Klein's deductions and the fact that she looked at the baby and the small child as no-one had ever done before. While never losing her foothold in non-judgemental compassion, Klein's gaze was unsqueamish and unflinching - as is the present author's. It is also possible for Sherwin-White to bring a modern and revealing clinical perspective to Klein's cases. Klein's writing, alarming in the 1920s, is, even now, startling to the newcomer. -- (06/16/2916) ""This book addresses in a most compelling and readable way Melanie Klein's groundbreaking work with very small children, setting this in a biographical and historical context within psychoanalysis. Klein's recognition of the vital importance of the mother-infant relationship long predated mid-twentieth-century discoveries about attachment and loss, and her analyses of small children led to fundamental discoveries about the inner world which still inform contemporary psychoanalytic work. Sherwin-White uses both Klein's published work and previously unseen archival material, drawing also on the seminal work of Claudia Frank, in what will be a valuable contribution to Klein scholarship.""-- (06/16/2017) ""Melanie Klein Revisited focuses on Klein's most revolutionary work, her bold inquiry into primitive states of mind in the infant and young child, those which are far beyond the reach of conscious memory. This book brings the reader's attention back in close focus to Klein's work with little children and the theoretical conclusions she drew from it. Here Susan Sherwin-White deploys her scholarly capacity on behalf of child analysts and child psychotherapists, as well as all those with an interest in psychoanalytic thinking. Her account of Klein's thought is based upon investigation not only of Klein's published work and what is known about Klein's life, but also on the archive held at the Wellcome Library for the History of Medicine. Light from these original researches constantly illuminates the known ground of Klein's most controversial works. This book helps us realise afresh the courage of Klein's deductions and the fact that she looked at the baby and the small child as no-one had ever done before. While never losing her foothold in non-judgemental compassion, Klein's gaze was unsqueamish and unflinching - as is the present author's. It is also possible for Sherwin-White to bring a modern and revealing clinical perspective to Klein's cases. Klein's writing, alarming in the 1920s, is, even now, startling to the newcomer.""-- (06/16/2916) Author InformationSusan Sherwin-White Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |