Theories_of_Personality 7th Ed Feist

(Claudeth Gamiao) #1
Feist−Feist: Theories of
Personality, Seventh
Edition

II. Psychodynamic
Theories


  1. Klein: Object Relations
    Theory


(^166) © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2009
Key Terms and Concepts



  • Object relations theories assume that the mother-child relationship
    during the first 4 or 5 months is the most critical time for personality
    development.

  • Klein believed that an important part of any relationship is the internal
    psychic representationsof early significant objects, such as the mother’s
    breast or the father’s penis.

  • Infants introjectthese psychic representations into their own psychic
    structure and then projectthem onto an external object, that is, another
    person. These internal pictures are not accurate representations of the other
    person but are remnants of earlier interpersonal experiences.

  • The ego,which exists at birth, can sense both destructive and loving
    forces, that is, both a nurturing and a frustrating breast.

  • To deal with the nurturing breast and the frustrating breast, infants split
    these objects into good and bad while also splitting their own ego, giving
    them a dual imageof self.

  • Klein believed that the superegocomes into existence much earlier than
    Freud had speculated and that it grows along with the Oedipal process
    rather than being a product of it.

  • During the early female Oedipus complex, the little girl adopts a feminine
    position toward both parents. She has a positive feeling both for her
    mother’s breasts and for her father’s penis, which she believes will feed her
    with babies.

  • Sometimes the little girl develops hostility toward her mother, who she
    fears will retaliate against her and rob her of her babies.

  • With most girls, however, the female Oedipus complex is resolved without
    any antagonism or jealousy toward their mother.


160 Part II Psychodynamic Theories


acquired phylogenetic endowment places her theory even further in the direction
of unconscious determinants.
The emphasis that Klein placed on the death instinct and phylogenetic en-
dowment would seem to suggest that she saw biology as more important than en-
vironment in shaping personality. However, Klein shifted the emphasis from Freud’s
biologically based infantile stages to an interpersonal one. Because the intimacy
and nurturing that infants receive from their mother are environmental experiences,
Klein and other object relations theorists lean more toward social determinantsof
personality.
On the dimension of uniqueness versus similarities,object relations theorists
tend more toward similarities. As clinicians dealing mostly with disturbed patients,
Klein, Mahler, Kohut, and Bowlby limited their discussions to the distinction be-
tween healthy personalities and pathological ones and were little concerned with
differences among psychologically healthy personalities.
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