In this book Claudia Frank discusses how Melanie Klein began to
develop her psychoanalysis of children. Melanie Klein in Berlin:
Her First Psychoanalyses of Children offers a detailed comparative
analysis of both published and unpublished material from the
Melanie Klein Archives.
By using previously unpublished studies, Frank demonstrates how
Klein enriched the concept of negative transference and laid the
basis for the innovations on both technique and theory that
eventually led not only to changes in child analysis, but also to
changes in the analysis of adults. Frank also uncovers the
influence that this had on Klein's later theories of the
paranoid-schizoid and depressive positions, and on her
understanding of psychotic anxieties.
The first seven chapters in the book provide an explanation of
the essence of Klein's approach to child psychoanalysis covering
topics including:
- the inevitability and usefulness of negative transference
- development of play
- early conscious and unconscious phantasies.
Part two provides a translation of Klein's unpublished notes on
the treatments of four of the children she analysed in Berlin:
7-year-old Grete, 2-year-old Rita, 7-year-old Inge and 6-year-old
Erna.
Melanie Klein in Berlin is the first text to make extensive use
of Klein's unpublished papers, clinical notes, diaries and
manuscripts. It will appeal to anyone involved in child
psychoanalysis and the development of Melanie Klein's thinking.
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