• Thumbnail for Abram Kardiner
    Abram Kardiner (17 August 1891, New York City – 20 July 1981, Connecticut) was a psychiatrist (Cornell Medical School, 1917) and psychoanalytic therapist...
    5 KB (432 words) - 02:04, 11 May 2023
  • Thumbnail for New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute
    such as Margaret Mahler, Ernst Kris, Kurt R. Eissler, Heinz Hartmann, Abram Kardiner, Rudolph Loewenstein, Charles Brenner, Thaddeus Ames, Robert C. Bak...
    2 KB (192 words) - 08:29, 28 April 2024
  • need for self-sufficiency, privacy, or independence. The neo-Freudian Abram Kardiner was primarily interested in learning how a specific society acquires...
    11 KB (1,366 words) - 08:40, 11 July 2023
  • processes such as the oppression of ethnic minorities affect mental health (Abram Kardiner), while others focus on the ways in which cultural symbols or social...
    27 KB (3,162 words) - 04:26, 14 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Karen Horney
    also includes Erich Fromm, Harry Stack Sullivan, Clara Thompson, and Abram Kardiner. — Bernard J. Paris In 1920, Horney was a founding member of the Berlin...
    37 KB (4,678 words) - 19:51, 24 June 2024
  • European School of Psychoanalysis and in 2011, he was invited to give the Abram Kardiner Lecture at the New York Academy of Medicine. He lectures widely in Europe...
    2 KB (262 words) - 20:22, 21 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Ruth Benedict
    and they had extensive and reciprocal influence on each other's work. Abram Kardiner was also affected by these ideas, and in time, the concept of "modal...
    35 KB (4,496 words) - 10:11, 30 May 2024
  • to: Jean Briggs, George Devereux, Cora DuBois, A. Irving Hallowell, Abram Kardiner, Ralph Linton, Melford Spiro, and at least tangentially Gregory Bateson...
    5 KB (640 words) - 16:42, 12 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Ralph Linton
    personality also expressed itself in the form of a seminar he organized with Abram Kardiner at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute. Kluckhohn, Clyde. 1958. Ralph...
    13 KB (1,590 words) - 03:51, 15 June 2024
  • General Hospital, and spent four years in the United States Army. With Abram Kardiner, Ovesey wrote The Mark of Oppression: A Psychosocial Study of the American...
    4 KB (441 words) - 02:48, 11 May 2023
  • critically in this framework include Sigmund Freud, Sándor Ferenczi, and Abram Kardiner among the early trauma theorists, but also the more recent theorists...
    10 KB (1,368 words) - 09:09, 9 May 2024
  • David Spiegel, M.D. "War stress and neurotic illness," co-authored with Abram Kardiner Spiegel died in December 2009 at age 95. He died in his sleep in his...
    10 KB (1,361 words) - 16:45, 17 March 2023
  • Benedict, the basic personality structure developed by Ralph Linton and Abram Kardiner, and the modal personality approach of Cora DuBois. These approaches...
    5 KB (561 words) - 10:43, 28 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cora Du Bois
    York Psychoanalytic Society. In New York she worked with psychiatrist Abram Kardiner, who became her mentor and collaborator for several projects in cross-cultural...
    21 KB (2,306 words) - 13:56, 17 July 2024
  • Research between 1949 and 1953 and spent 7½ years in analysis with Dr. Abram Kardiner, the founder of the first psychoanalytic institute in the United States...
    11 KB (1,198 words) - 07:50, 25 July 2024
  • Durkheim 1891 Pedro Bosch-Gimpera Herman Karl Haberlin Zora Neale Hurston Abram Kardiner Géza Róheim 1897 Theodora Kroeber George Peter Murdock Robert Redfield...
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  • individual and social character, she took up the suggestion of psychiatrist, Abram Kardiner, then associated with Columbia University's Department of Sociology...
    24 KB (3,225 words) - 03:22, 9 June 2024
  • The Art of Making Love, archived from the original on 2014-01-16. Kardiner, Abram (1955), Sex and Morality, Routledge & Kegan Paul. Lowen, Alexander...
    46 KB (5,275 words) - 03:07, 4 June 2024