Sabina Spielrein
Sabina Nikolayevna Spielrein (; 7 November 25 October 1885
OS – 11 August 1942) was a Russian
physician and one of the first female
psychoanalysts. She was in succession the patient, then student, then colleague of
Carl Gustav Jung, with whom she had an intimate relationship during 1908–1910, as is documented in their correspondence from the time and her diaries. She also met, corresponded, and had a collegial relationship with
Sigmund Freud. She worked with and psychoanalysed Swiss developmental psychologist
Jean Piaget. She worked as a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, teacher and paediatrician in Switzerland and Russia. In a thirty-year professional career, she published over 35 papers in three languages (German, French and Russian), covering psychoanalysis,
developmental psychology,
psycholinguistics and
educational psychology. Among her works in the field of psychoanalysis is the essay titled "Destruction as the Cause of Coming Into Being", written in
German in 1912.
Spielrein was a pioneer of psychoanalysis and one of the first to introduce the concept of the
death instinct. She was one of the first psychoanalysts to conduct a case study on
schizophrenia and have a dissertation appear in a psychoanalytic journal. Spielrein is increasingly recognized as an important and innovative thinker who was marginalized in history because of her unusual eclecticism, refusal to join factions,
feminist approach to psychology, and her murder in the
Holocaust.
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