ABSTRACT

Melanie Klein's extension of Freud's ideas - in particular her explorations into the world of the infant and her emphasis on the complex interactions between the infant's internal world of powerful primitive emotions of love and hate and the mothering that the infant receives - were greeted with skepticism but are now widely accepted as providing an invaluable way of understanding human cognitive and emotional development. Klein's insights shed light on persecuted states, guilt, the drive to create and to repair; they also provide the clinician with a theory of technique.

Klein's work has inspired the work of psychoanalysts around the world. Her concept of projective identification with its implications for the understanding of countertransference made a significant impact on her followers and on psychoanalysts in other countries and from other schools of thought. Further exploration of these ideas has led to greater understanding of how change occurs in psychoanalysis and has inspired a large literature with a particular focus on technique.

part I|38 pages

Historical Frame

part II|260 pages

Theory and Practice

chapter Seven|11 pages

“The mountains of primal grief”

chapter Ten|13 pages

Responding to narcissism

chapter Thirteen|5 pages

Reparation: waiting for a concept

chapter Fourteen|11 pages

Mourning and the development of internal objects