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Melanie Klein and Marcelle Spira: Their Correspondence and Context PDF

145 Pages·2014·4.637 MB·English
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Melanie Klein and Marcelle Spira: Their Correspondence and Context Melanie Klein and Marcelle Spira: Their Correspondence and Context includes 45 letters Melanie Klein wrote to the Swiss psychoanalyst Marcelle Spira between 1955 and 1960, as well as six rough drafts from Spira. They were discovered in Spira’s library after her death in 2006. As only a few of the letters that Klein wrote to her colleagues have been preserved, this moving, historically important correspondence enlightens the last (cid:191) ve years of Klein’s creative life. The common theme of the letters is their discussion of the French translation of The Psycho-Analysis of Children by Boulanger in collaboration with Spira. The translation, (cid:191) rst undertaken by Lacan, went through many ups and downs until it was published in 1959 by the Presses Universitaires de France. Klein also discusses her current work, in particular Envy and Gratitude (1957). She encourages her pioneering Swiss colleague Spira to be patient in the face of the resistance shown towards Kleinian thinking. Identifying herself to some extent with her younger follower, Klein reveals a very touching autobiographical account of the dif(cid:191) culties that she herself had encountered in her work and how she overcame them. In Melanie Klein and Marcelle Spira: Their Correspondence and Context, Jean-Michel Quinodoz brings together these important letters. This rare collection of their correspondence is a valuable contribution to the history of psychoanalysis and will be essential reading for psychoanalysts, trainee psychoanalysts and lay readers with an interest in the work of Klein and Spira. Jean-Michel Quinodoz is a psychoanalyst in private practice in Geneva. He is a member of the Swiss Psychoanalytical Society and a Distinguished Fellow of the British Psychoanalytical Society. He is author of The Taming of Solitude (Routledge, 1993), Dreams That Turn Over a Page (Routledge, 2002), Reading Freud (Routledge, 2005) and Listening to Hanna Segal (Routledge, 2007). This page intentionally left blank Melanie Klein and Marcelle Spira: Their Correspondence and Context Jean-Michel Quinodoz First published in France 2013 by Presses Universitaires de France 6, Avenue Reille, 75014 Paris First published 2015 by Routledge 27 Church Road, Hove, East Sussex BN3 2FA and by Routledge 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2015 Jean-Michel Quinodoz The right of Jean-Michel Quinodoz to be identi(cid:191) ed as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identi(cid:191) cation and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Klein, Melanie. [Melanie Klein. English] Melanie Klein and Marcelle Spira : their correspondence and context / [edited by] Jean-Michel Quinodoz. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-415-85582-2 (hbk) 1. Klein, Melanie--Correspondence. 2. Spira, Marcelle, 1910-2006. 3. Psychoanalysis. 4. Women psychoanalysts. I. Quinodoz, Jean-Michel. II. Title. BF109.K57A413 2014 150.19’5092--dc23 2014008556 ISBN: 978-0-415-85582-2 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-315-75663-9 (ebk) Typeset in Times by Saxon Graphics Ltd, Derby To Danielle This page intentionally left blank Contents Foreword viii Ronald Britton Acknowledgements and permissions xi 1 The unpublished letters of Melanie Klein 1 2 Melanie Klein, Marcelle Spira, Raymond de Saussure and the Swiss Psychoanalytical Society 6 3 From Lacan to Boulanger: It took ten years to translate The Psycho-Analysis of Children into French 15 4 Many common threads can be followed in parallel 20 5 Transcription of the 45 letters that Melanie Klein sent to Marcelle Spira 44 6 Six draft copies of letters from Marcelle Spira to Melanie Klein 106 7 Facsimiles 118 Bibliography 125 Name index 128 Index of Melanie Klein’s letters 131 Index of Marcelle Spira’s initial drafts 132 Foreword Ronald Britton Though this book is presented with characteristic modesty by Jean-Michel Quinodoz, it is invaluable for those with an interest in the history of psychoanalysis and doubly so for those who have been informed and inspired by the work of Melanie Klein. We have to thank him not only for unearthing and publishing this cache of illuminating correspondence, but also for contextualizing it so very well. His introduction identi(cid:191) es who people are, how they are signi(cid:191) cant and what was taking place in the world of psychoanalysis at such an interesting and creative time. This correspondence between Melanie Klein in the last decade of her life in London and Marcelle Spira, a young woman determinedly pioneering a Kleinian analytic approach in Switzerland, is moving, enlightening and historically important. At the time of this correspondence Klein was well established in the British Psychoanalytical Society with a group of distinguished followers and adherents throughout the world. She had however many opponents both at home and abroad. Though her analytic experience and education had been in Budapest, it was in Berlin in the 1920s that her groundbreaking development of child analysis began. It not only started a new chapter in the understanding of child development, it also changed the analysis of adults and enlarged the patient group with whom it was possible to work to include borderline and psychotic patients. When Marcelle Spira trained in Argentina, there was a group there who espoused Klein’s work, which included Spira’s analyst Marie Langer, Enrique and Arminda Pichon- Rivière, Willy and Madeleine Baranger and Heinrich Racker. Spira was taken aback when she returned to her home country, to (cid:191) nd that Klein’s in(cid:192) uence had not reached Switzerland. Marcelle Spira was in her forties, much the same age as Klein was when she produced her highly original, controversial work in the 1920s, (cid:191) rst in Berlin and then London. This, I feel, facilitated Melanie Klein’s identi(cid:191) cation with this young woman who, alone and in the face of analytic opposition, was trying to introduce into Switzerland the Kleinian analysis she had learned in Argentina. Melanie Klein very much encouraged and supported her: providing her with personal clinical supervision and commentary on her psychoanalytic papers; and Foreword ix producing reinforcements in the persons of her two stalwarts, Hanna Segal and Betty Joseph, plus other visitors to her analytic patch in Geneva, such as Herbert Rosenfeld, Esther Bick, Donald Meltzer, Isabel Menzies and Hans Thorner. What this correspondence reveals is a growing friendship from letters that begin, “Chère Madame Spira” and end with “Kindest regards”, to those later that begin, “Ma chère Marcelle” and end “With Love, yours, Melanie Klein”. There are 45 letters from Klein to Spira written in English and alas only six draft letters from Spira to Klein, written in French, as Klein did not keep professional/personal correspondence. Jean-Michel Quinodoz tells us Betty Joseph’s explanation for this was her policy of protecting privacy. What are also vividly revealed are Klein’s professional preoccupations in the last (cid:191) ve years of her life: (cid:191) ve years in which she wrote Envy and Gratitude, Narrative of a Child Analysis and such papers as “Our adult world and its roots in infancy”. Her concern that her work should gain recognition internationally is evident. She could not manage to journey to South America and therefore wrote: [I am] all the more happy that Dr Segal is going to work in the Argentine. In addition to her qualities as an excellent teacher and representative of my work, she has a very good command of French, which will be helpful. (Kl 37, 19 September 1958) It seems that Klein herself was at home reading Spira’s French while writing to her in English. Possibly English was not her second but third language. Being read in France in French is a preoccupation for Klein throughout the correspondence and the (cid:191) nal triumph of a complete French translation of The Psycho-Analysis of Children is a touching moment. She wrote in May 1959, the year before her death, “it is the ful(cid:191) lment of a dream that I have had for the past 27 years” (Kl 41, 1 May 1959). Jean-Michel Quinodoz tells us of the vicissitudes of the translation: its inception by Lacan; its continuance by Rene Diatkine and its subsequent discontinuance; its resumption by Françoise Girard, which was again interrupted by her premature death; and its (cid:191) nal completion by her widowed husband Jean Baptiste Boulanger. Boulanger was French Canadian who trained in Paris and then resettled in Canada where he played a major role in the creation of the Canadian Psychoanalytical Society. He (cid:191) rst heard of Klein’s work at Merleau-Ponty’s lectures in Paris and was enthralled. Lacan asked them to translate the second half of Klein’s book and Françoise began this in 1954. Klein’s international connections and interests are evident throughout this correspondence. Klein’s optimism in the face of opposition and rejection she transmits to Marcelle in whom she sees a fellow spirit: It is very dif(cid:191) cult to stand by oneself, and it needs a great deal of courage and strength, but I believe you have these two qualities and therefore …you will

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.