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Full Description
This book explores how Kleinian psychoanalysis has developed over the past 75 years and how it illuminates human experience and relationships inside and outside the consulting room.
The text will help the reader gain a deeper understanding of processes of splitting, projection, and identification in clinical work; a broader conception of how internal and external worlds interact and affect each other; greater clarity on key theoretical and ethical issues; and an overview of what the Kleinian tradition has contributed to mental health and wellbeing. Concepts are presented in a structured progression, accompanied by summaries of key papers by prominent clinicians.
Offering an accessible account of a key strand of British Object Relations, this essential resource will be of value to trainee, newly qualified, and experienced psychodynamic counsellors and psychoanalytic psychotherapists, as well as teachers, social workers, and nurses.
Contents
Foreword 1. Psychoanalysis before Klein 2. Melanie Klein's life and work 3. Paranoid-schizoid and depressive functioning 4. Separation and integration 5. Art and depressive functioning 6. Pathological organisations of the personality 7. The capacity to think 8. Oedipal struggles 9. Perverse use of projective identification 10. Transference and countertransference 11. Envy and the death instinct 12. Institutional and social dynamics 13. Sexuality 14. Difference 15. What is distinctive about Kleinian practice?