Two-part webinar series with John Steiner and Ronald Britton, chaired by Michael Feldman
Book ticketsOrganised by:
Melanie Klein Trust
Description
Two-part webinar series with John Steiner and Ronald Britton, chaired by Michael Feldman – The Appeasement of Ancestral Ghosts: Shakespeare’s ‘Hamlet’ and Aeschylus’ ‘Oresteia’
We are delighted to have John Steiner and Ron Britton presenting new papers in a two- part webinar series this autumn. John Steiner will explore mourning in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, followed the week after by Ron Brutton examining the ego and super-ego in Aeschylus’ Oresteia.
Chaired by Michael Feldman, each event will consist of a paper presentation and discussion between the speakers and Chair, followed by questions from the audience.
Join us for these special webinars on two of the most compelling tragic dramas in Western literature.
1st October: Turning Ancestral Ghosts into Ancestors: Mourning in ‘Hamlet’, by John Steiner
As Freud described, the vital work of mourning is obstructed if a lost object is concretely internalised, haunting the bereaved like an ancestral ghost demanding reparation and revenge. To mourn properly, one must do the difficult work of withdrawing projections, giving up the object, and allowing the ghost to return to its grave. The lost object lives on in the internal world, but now as a symbol: the ghosts become ancestors. Shakespeare’s ‘Hamlet’ shows how painful the choice can be between identifying with ancestral values and defying them to articulate a personal point of view. The young Hamlet is spurred to revenge when he discovers that his dead father’s hatred of the new king and queen aligns with his own. However, this revenge is delayed by his capacity for introspection and empathic suffering, while his ability to think symbolically opens up a rich world of imagination, fantasy and dreaming.
8th October: ‘Time must have a stop’ – Ron Britton on the ‘Oresteia’
The ‘Oresteia’, by Greek tragedian Aeschylus, was described by Gilbert Murray as an, ‘attempt of a powerful mind to think out one of the deep, unresolved mysteries of life – the problem of Sin, Punishment and Forgiveness.’ This ‘unresolved mystery’ resurfaced in the European Renaissance, notably in the plays of Shakespeare, and has since also re-emerged in psychology. In psychoanalysis, it appears as the problem of the relationship between the ‘superego’ and the ‘ego’, and it was this that attracted Melanie Klein to write about the ‘Oresteia’ late in life, while reviewing her ideas on the development of the superego. Ron Britton will examine how these ideas appear in the ‘Oresteia’, drawing on Klein’s thinking and his own psychoanalytic understanding.
John Steiner, Ron Britton and Michael Feldman are all Distinguished Fellows of the British Psychoanalytical Society. John Steiner and Ron Britton are recipients of the Sigourney Award. Michael Feldman is Chair of the Melanie Klein Trust.
Tickets: £30 for one session, £50 for both sessions, including a link to a recording of the event valid for two weeks after the second webinar.