Juliet Mitchell's Introduction To The Selected Melanie Klein
In her introduction to The Selected Melanie Klein, Juliet Mitchell provides an overview of the relationship between Melanie Klein's psychoanalytic theory and that of Freud. According to the author, Klein is in fact a more autonomous intellectual thinker than is commonly attributed to her, and much of the introduction is devoted to elucidating the distinctions between the two. Mitchell's main areas of focus (with regard to Klein) include subject-object relations, and whether the distinction between conscious, unconscious, and preconscious minds should exist.
According to Mitchell, one of the major tenets of Klein's psychoanalytic theory involves the assertion that people are born with the id, ego, and super-ego indistinct from one another. However, Mitchell never discloses exactly when such a distinction manifests itself. Because Klein worked predominantly with young children, it is difficult to ascertain whether she feels that the split between id, ego, and super-ego ever occurs. Given that Klein worked with infants, inability to differentiate between id, ego, and super-ego also seems hardly surprising. It is highly unlikely that many infant children would be able to understand the role of the societal structure in influencing how they perceive the world.
Klein's position on the relationship between id, ego, and superego is difficult to ascertain. Specifically, when she notes that the three aspects of the psyche are indistinct from one another in the infant child's psyche, does she contend that the three facets play an equal role, or are they less pronounced because neither of them are able to manifest in a singular manner? It is also interesting to ponder whether Klein's stance on the superego would have changed had she worked in the intellectual climate of Lacan rather than (or in addition to) Freud, as Lacan placed a far greater emphasis than Freud on the societal influence of the superego in shaping the formation of child subjectivity....
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now