Sophie Morgenstern
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (April 2012) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Sophie Morgenstern (1 April 1875 – 13 June 1940) was a French psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. She is known in France as a pioneer of child psychoanalysis and an influence on more famous figures such as Françoise Dolto.[1]
Originally of Polish Jewish origin, Morgenstern went to medical school in Zurich, where she studied at the Burghölzli clinic under Eugen Bleuler and Eugene Minkowski.
She came to Paris in the 1920s where she was analysed by Eugénie Sokolnicka, one of the first Freudian psychoanalysts present in France. She worked at the Hôpital Vaugirard, under the direction of Georges Heuyer, from 1924. Her innovations included the use of drawings in child psychotherapy.
She committed suicide in Paris in June 1940 after the Nazis entered the city.
References
[edit]- ^ de Mijolla, Alain (2002). "Pour une histoire de la psychanalyse". Espaces Temps. 80 (1): 115–125. doi:10.3406/espat.2002.4204. ISSN 0339-3267.
- 1875 births
- 1940 deaths
- 1940 suicides
- 19th-century Polish Jews
- French psychiatrists
- French psychoanalysts
- People from Grodno
- French women psychiatrists
- Polish Jews who died in the Holocaust
- French Jews who died in the Holocaust
- Suicides by Jews during the Holocaust
- Suicides in Paris
- 20th-century French women physicians
- 20th-century French physicians
- 20th-century French women scientists
- French medical biography stubs