Marjorie Brierley

Marjorie Flowers Brierley (24 March 1893 - 21 April 1984) was a pioneer of psychoanalysis in Britain, and helped chair the Controversial discussions of 1942 which shaped the subsequent history of the British Psycho-Analytical Society.[1]

Training and contributions

Brierley went through a double training analysis of four years from 1927 onwards, becoming a training analyst herself in 1933.[2]

Significant among the eleven papers Brierley published between 1932 and 1947,[3] were her contributions on female gender and early development, and on the nature of the affect.[4] Her proposal of a "temporary armistice" in the heated debates of the wartime Society was significant in paving the way for their ultimate resolution.[5]

Selected Writings

  • ___'Specific Determinants in Feminine Development', International Journal of Psychoanalysis XVII (1936)
  • ___'Affects in Theory and Practice' XVIII (1937)
  • ___'A Prefatory Note on Internalized Objects and Depression' XX (1939)
  • ___Trends in Psycho-Analysis (1951)

See also

References

  1. B. Maddox, Freud's Wizard (2006) p. 148
  2. A. Hayman, What Do Our Terms Mean? (2013) p. 69-70
  3. A. Hayman, What Do Our Terms Mean? (2013) p. 70
  4. O. Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 21, p. 90 and p. 600
  5. A. Hayman, What Do Our Terms mean? (2013) p. 71

Further reading

  • Ruth Stein, Psychoanalytic Theories of Affect (1999)
  • Marjorie Brierley
  • Jan Abram (2015). "Marjorie Brierley". Institute of Psychoanalysis. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
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