Edith Jacobson
Edith Jacobson | |
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| Born | Edith Jacobssohn September 10, 1897 |
| Died | December 8, 1978 (aged 81) |
| Nationality | German |
| Known for | Revised drive theory |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Psychoanalysis |
| Institutions | Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute |
| Part of a series of articles on |
| Psychoanalysis |
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Edith Jacobson (German: Edith Jacobssohn; September 10, 1897 – December 8, 1978) was a German psychoanalyst. Her major contributions to psychoanalytic thinking dealt with the development of the sense of identity and self-esteem and with an understanding of depression and psychosis. She was able to integrate the tripartite structural model of classic psychoanalysis with the theory of object relations into a revised drive theory. Thereby, she increased the treatment possibilities of the more disturbed pre-oedipal patients.