Klein, Melanie

Klein, Melanie
orig. Melanie Reizes

born March 30, 1882, Vienna, Austria
died Sept. 22, 1960, London, Eng.

Austrian-British psychoanalyst.

She married at age 21 and had three children before undergoing psychoanalysis with Ferenczi Sándor in Budapest, Hung. She studied the psychoanalysis of young children, joining the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute (1921–26) and later moving to London. In works such as The Psychoanalysis of Children (1932) and Narrative of a Child Analysis (1961), she asserted that children's play was a symbolic way of controlling anxiety and that observation of free play with toys could serve as a means of determining early psychological impulses.

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▪ British psychologist
née Reizes
born March 30, 1882, Vienna
died Sept. 22, 1960, London

      Austrian-born British psychoanalyst known for her work with young children, in which observations of free play provided insights into the child's unconscious fantasy life, enabling her to psychoanalyze children as young as two or three years of age.

      The youngest child of a Viennese dental surgeon, Klein expressed an early interest in medicine but abandoned her plans when she married at 21. The marriage, though unhappy, produced three children. She became interested in psychoanalysis in Budapest a few years before World War I, undergoing psychoanalysis with Sándor Ferenczi (Ferenczi, Sándor), himself a close associate of Freud. Ferenczi urged her to study the psychoanalysis of young children, and in 1919 she produced her first paper in the field. Two years later she was invited by Karl Abraham to join the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, remaining there until 1926, when she moved to London.

      In The Psychoanalysis of Children (1932), she presented her observations and theory of child analysis. Believing children's play to be a symbolic way of controlling anxiety, she observed free play with toys as a means of determining the psychological impulses and ideas associated with the early years of life. Her object-relations theory related ego development during this period to the experience of various drive objects, physical objects that were associated with psychic drives. In early development, she found, a child relates to parts rather than to complete objects—for example, to the breast rather than to the mother. This unstable and primitive mode of identification was termed by Klein the paranoid-schizoid position. The next development phase is the depressive position, in which the infant comes to relate to whole objects, such as the mother or father. This phase is marked by the infant's recognition of the ambivalence of his feelings toward objects, and thus the moderation of his internal conflicts about them.

      Klein believed that the anxiety in the paranoid-schizoid position was persecutory, threatening the annihilation of the self, and the anxiety of the second, later position was depressive, being related to fear of the harm done to loved objects by the infant's own destructive impulses.

      Beginning in 1934 Klein used her work with adult patients to clarify and extend her ideas on infant and childhood anxiety, presenting her views in a number of papers and a book, Envy and Gratitude (1957). Her final work, published posthumously in 1961, Narrative of a Child Analysis, was based on detailed notes taken during 1941.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • KLEIN, MELANIE REIZES — (1882–1960), British psychoanalyst. Born Melanie Reizes in Vienna, she settled in Budapest after her marriage to businessman Arthur Klein. There she became interested in psychoanalysis and was analyzed by Sándor Ferenzi. In 1919 she read her… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Klein,Melanie — Klein (klīn), Melanie. 1882 1960. Austrian born British psychoanalyst who specialized in child development. Her works include The Psychoanalysis of Children (1932) and Envy and Gratitude (1957). * * * …   Universalium

  • Klein, Melanie — (1882 1960) An Austrian born, second generation psychoanalyst, trained under Sandor Ferenczi in Budapest and Karl Abraham in Berlin. She moved to London in 1926 and became a major figure in British and world psychoanalysis , the founder, within… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • Klein, Melanie — orig. Melanie Reizes (30 mar. 1882, Viena, Austria–22 sep. 1960, Londres, Inglaterra). Psicoanalista británica de origen austríaco. Se casó a los 21 años y tuvo tres hijos antes de someterse a psicoanálisis con Sándor Ferenczi en Budapest,… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Klein, Melanie Reizes —    (1880–1960)    Leading theorist of the unconscious in early stages of infancy, Melanie Klein was born in Vienna, the daughter of a physician. She studied art and history at Vienna University, without graduating, then at the age of 21 married… …   Historical dictionary of Psychiatry

  • Klein, Melanie — (1882 1960)    Austrian psychoan alyst. Born in Vienna, she studied at the University of Vienna. After moving to Budapest she was drawn to the works of Sigmund Freud and was analysed by Sandor Ferenczi. She went to Berlin and later settled in… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Klein — Klein, Melanie …   Dictionary of sociology

  • Melanie Klein — (Viena; 30 de marzo de 1882 Londres; 22 de septiembre de 1960) fue una psicoanalista austriaca, creadora de una teoría del funcionamiento psíquico. Hizo importantes contribuciones sobre el desarrollo infantil desde la teoría psicoanalítica y… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Mélanie Klein — Melanie Klein Pour les articles homonymes, voir Klein. Melanie Klein http://tecfa.unige.ch/tecfa/teaching/UVLibre/0001/bin47/m klein.jpg …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Klein — Klein, Lawrence * * * (as used in expressions) Klein, Calvin (Richard) Klein, Melanie Klein, Yves …   Enciclopedia Universal

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