# Reparation (psychoanalysis)

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The term '''reparation''' was used by [Melanie Klein](/source/Melanie_Klein) (1921) to indicate a psychological process of making mental repairs to a damaged internal world.<ref>Lani A. Gerity, ''Creativity and the Dissociated Patient'' (1999) p. 20</ref> In [object relations theory](/source/object_relations_theory), it represents a key part of the movement from the [paranoid-schizoid position](/source/paranoid-schizoid_position) to the [depressive position](/source/depressive_position) — the pain of the latter helping to fuel the urge to reparation.<ref>Robert Caper, ''Immaterial Facts'' (2000) p. 117</ref>

==Klein==
{{Main|Splitting (psychology)#Melanie Klein}}
[Melanie Klein](/source/Melanie_Klein) considered the ability to recognise our destructive impulses towards those we love and to make reparation for the damage we have caused them, to be an essential part of mental health. A key condition for that to take place is the recognition of one's separateness from one's parents,<ref name = Segal89>Hanna Segal, ''Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein'' (London 1964) p. 89</ref> which makes possible the reparative attempt to restore their inner representations, however damaged they may be felt to be.<ref>Richard Appignanesi ed., ''Introducing Melanie Klein'' (Cambridge 2006) p. 106</ref>

Acceptance of reality, inner and outer, forms a major part of the process and involves both abandoning fantasies of [omnipotence](/source/omnipotence)<ref>Lesley Caldwell ed., ''Winnicott and the Psychoanalytic Tradition'' (London 2007) p. 25</ref> and accepting [the independent](/source/The_Independent) existence of one's objects of attachment.<ref name = Segal89/>

Where the damage done to the internal world is felt by a patient to be extreme, however, the task of reparation may seem too great, which is one of the obstacles facing the analytic attempt at cure.<ref>Mary Jacobus, ''The Poetics of Psychoanalysis: In the Wake of Klein'' (Oxford 2005) p. 39</ref>

==Manic reparation==

Kleinian thought distinguishes between true reparation and manic reparation, the latter being driven by guilt rather than overcoming it.<ref>Hyam Sydney Klein/Joan Symington, ''Imprisoned Pain and its Transformation'' (London 2000) p. 19</ref> Manic reparation denies the pain and concern of feeling guilty by using magical methods of repair<ref>Hanna Segal, ''Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein'' (London 1964), p. 84-5 and p. 88</ref> which maintain omnipotent control of the object in question, and refuse to allow it its separate existence. Thus manic reparation has to be endlessly repeated, since success would free the object from the manic person's (contemptuous) power.<ref>Hanna Segal, ''Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein'' (London 1964), p. 83</ref>

==Winnicott==
{{Main|Donald Winnicott}}
[Donald Winnicott](/source/Donald_Winnicott) made his own distinctive contribution to the role of reparation in the "personalising" of the individual, the move from the ruthless use of the external object to a sense of concern.<ref>Quoted in Janet Malcolm, ''Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession'' (London 1988) p. 34-5</ref> Winnicott focused on the way at a certain stage of development a feeling of guilt or concern begins to appear after the wholehearted instinctual experience of a feed. But once the reparative gesture—a smile, a gift—has been successfully acknowledged by the mother, Winnicott writes: "The breast (body, mother) is now mended and the day's work is done. Tomorrow's instincts can be awaited with limited fear".<ref>Quoted in Adam Phillips, ''On Flirtation'' (London 1994) p. 17 and p. 62</ref> The child's contribution is a way of accepting the debt owed to the mother, for their survival and their participation in the work of reparation.<ref name = Gaitanidis83/> If, on the other hand, the reparative gesture is not accepted, the infant is left with a feeling of depression or meaninglessness.<ref name = Gaitanidis83>A. Gaitanidis/P. Curk, ''Narcissism: A Critical Reader'' (London 2007) p. 83–84</ref> 

A similar dynamic may later appear between patient and analyst, with the making of progress being offered as a means of reparation.<ref>I. Salzberger-Wittenberg, ''Psychoanalytic Insight and Relationships'' (1984) p. 92</ref>

==Art==
Kleinians considered that artistic creation was driven by the [phantasy](/source/Fantasy_(psychology)) of repairing the loved object (mother).<ref>[http://www.psychoanalysis-and-therapy.com/human_nature/glover/index.html Nicola Glover "Psychoanalytic Aesthetics: The British School"]</ref> 

[Marion Milner](/source/Marion_Milner) in the [Independent](/source/Middle_Group) tradition also saw art as a way of both symbolizing and enacting inner reparation;<ref>Lesley Caldwell ed., ''Winnicott and the Psychoanalytic Tradition'' (London 2007) p. 31</ref> but was criticised by Kleinians for giving too large a role to the omnipotent feelings of the artist in reparation.<ref>Hinshelwood, Chapter 3 n54, in [http://www.psychoanalysis-and-therapy.com/human_nature/glover/index.html Glover]</ref>

==See also==
{{Columns-list|colwidth=22em|
*[Donald Meltzer](/source/Donald_Meltzer)
*[Melancholia](/source/Melancholia)
*[Sublimation](/source/Sublimation_(psychology))
}}

==References==

{{Reflist|2|}}

==Further reading==
Melanie Klein, ''Love, Guilt and Reparation'' (2013)

==External links==
* [http://www.enotes.com/reparation-reference/reparation Reparation]

{{DEFAULTSORT:Reparation (Psychoanalysis)}}
Category:Psychoanalytic terminology

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Reparation (psychoanalysis)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reparation_(psychoanalysis)) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reparation_(psychoanalysis)?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
