ABSTRACT

Spanning six decades, this collection, Journeys in Psychoanalysis: The selected works of Elizabeth Spillius, traces the arc of her career from anthropology and entering psychoanalysis ‘almost by accident’, to becoming one of her generation’s leading scholars of Melanie Klein.

Born in 1924 in Ontario, Canada, Elizabeth arrived at the London School of Economics for postgraduate studies in the 1950s and soon embarked on a groundbreaking study of family life in the East End of London that produced a PhD and her first book, Family and Social Network, under her maiden name Elizabeth Bott. Published by the Tavistock Institute in 1957, it remains one of the most influential works published on the sociology of the family.  

These papers are a testament to the luminous intellect and understated compassion that Elizabeth has always brought to her work. They vividly map not just the evolution of Elizabeth’s career but the development of Melanie Klein’s thought, often drawing in compelling fashion on the writer’s own experiences with her patients. Each is written with the clarity and concision that makes difficult concepts eminently comprehensible to psychoanalysts, psychoanalytic psychotherapists and laymen alike.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|22 pages

Conjugal Roles and Social Networks 1

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Varieties of Envious Experience

chapter Chapter 5|28 pages

Kleinian Thought

Overview and personal view

chapter Chapter 6|11 pages

On Formulating Clinical Fact to a Patient

chapter Chapter 7|12 pages

Developments in Kleinian Technique

chapter Chapter 9|6 pages

Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy

Learning to understand oneself in contrast to being understood by another

chapter Chapter 10|19 pages

On Becoming a British Psychoanalyst

chapter Chapter 12|11 pages

Melitta and Her Mother