Margaret Little

For the gambist, see Les Voix Humaines.

Margaret I. Little (1901 – 1994) was a British psychoanalyst of the British Middle Group, and an influential figure in the creation of object relations theory, particularly as an early proponent of the utility of countertransference in the analytic process.[1]

Training and contributions

Little's first analysis was with Ella Freeman Sharpe, and her second with D. W. Winnicott; and it was out of her experiences as analysand that she wrote her seminal article of 1951 on 'Counter-transference and the patient's response to it'.[2] There she insisted on the element of reality in the patient's perception of the analyst, and the way it could serve as a mirror for the analyst in illuminating the countertransference.[3] She continued her exploration of the total quality of the analyst's response to the patient in later writings.[4]

She also took issue with what she saw as the coercive side of free association, maintaining that "We no longer 'require' our patients to tell us everything that is in their minds. On the contrary, we give them permission to do so".[5]

Selected writings

See also

References

  1. P. Casement, Further Learning from the Patient (1990) p. 12 and p. 180n, ISBN 978-0415054263, Routledge
  2. L. A. Kirshner, Having a Life (2013) p. 23, ASIN: B00DL1TY8O, Kindle Edition
  3. C. Holmes, The Paradox of Countertransference (2005) p. 12 and p. 185, ISBN 978-0333929650, Palgrave
  4. Janet Malcolm, Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession (1988) p. 137, ISBN 978-0394710341, Vintage Books
  5. P. Casement, Further Learning from the Patient (1990) p. 160, ISBN 978-0415054263, Routledge

External links

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