Google has celebrated the 119th birthday of child
psychologist Anna Freud, with a colourful doodle on its homepage.
The
doodle is a playful interpretation of Freud’s legacy, using multi-coloured
shapes to reflect the complexity of her trade and the youth of her patients.
Anna was the youngest child of the founder of
psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, and his wife Martha. She was the only one of his
six children to take up psychology.
Aged just 13, she joined her father’s weekly discussions
on psychoanalytic ideas.
Her early interest paid off, and she later revolutionized
how children are treated in a wide range of fields, by pioneering the idea that
children must be watched in order for adults to understand their perspective.
Longer visiting hours in hospitals for young patients,
and the use of screens and video cameras to make courtrooms more accommodating
for children giving evidence, are both attributed to her.
Freud started her career as a teacher in 1920s Vienna,
and established her own psychoanalytical practice with children in 1923. It is during
this time that she realized the early toddler years are crucial to a child’s
future mental development.
In 1935 Anna became director of the Vienna
Psychoanalytical Training Institute. But she and her father were forced to flee
Nazi-occupied Vienna in 1938, and so she established the Hampstead Child
Therapy Course and Clinic in London, which was re-named the Anna Freud Centre
after she died in 1982.
She would go on to use her observations to build a theory
of what could be considered normal development, and trained her staff to
consider a child’s behaviour analytically.
From the 1950s until she died, Freud regularly
lectured in the US, as well as teaching and visiting friends.
During the 1970s she was concerned with the problems of
working with emotionally deprived and socially disadvantaged children, and she
studied deviations and delays in development.
In 1982, she died at her home in London aged 86.
"I don't think I'd be a good subject for
biography," she once commented, "not enough 'action'! You would say
all there is to say in a few sentences - she spent her life with
children!"
News Credit: The Independent UK
No comments:
Post a Comment