21 December 2024

Bruno Bettelheim: a brilliant psychologist?

Bruno Bettelheim 
Tantor media

Bruno Bettelheim (1903–90) was born in Vienna, son of a middle-class Jewish lumber merchant. He entered Vienna Uni, but was forced to leave to take over his fam­ily business when his father sickened. In 1930, he married school-teacher Gina Al­stadt, a dis­ciple of Anna Freud.

During the 1930s Bruno and Gina took care of an autistic child who lived in their Vienna home for 7 years. After 10 years, Bettelheim returned to his education, earning a PhD in 1938, among the last Jews award­ed a doc­torate before the Nazis annexed Austria in the 1938 Anschluss.

In the late 1930s, Bettelheim travelled between German state hospitals during the infamous Disabled Euthanasia Programme, the st­art of his re­search in mental patients. He became an accredit­ed ther­ap­ist and return­ed to Austria. But Bettelheim was arr­ested in 1939 by the Gestapo and spent 10.5 months in­ Dachau and then Buchenwald con­cen­trat­ion camps. In the camps, he supervised the prison­ers' mental health. His rel­ease occ­ur­red just prior to WW2 but he lost everything and his wife left.

Empty Fort­ress: Infant­ile Autism and the Birth of the Self, 1967

Bettelheim married Ger­trude Weinfeld in 1941 and had 3 children. After his release, Bettelheim ?moved to Australia in 1939, and then to the U.S in 1943, becoming a naturalised cit­izen there. He sur­v­ived by teach­ing art history, German literature and psychol­ogy.

He wrote his concentration camps experiences in Indiv­idual and Mass Behaviour in Extreme Situations (1943). He analysed camp in­mat­es’ beh­aviour, studying the effects of horror on the prison­ers, prison guards and himself. Bettel­heim used psychoan­al­ytic princip­les, includ­ing Anna Freud's concept of iden­t­ification with the aggres­sor, to explain why many prisoners took on the val­ues of their tort­urers to survive. He saw many inmates falling prey to Vic­tim Guilt.

In 1945 Gen Eisenhower asked his officers in Europe to read the article, to prepare for the shock of dealing with concentration camp survivors.

Bettelheim’s work had to be analysed in the context of great soc­ial change, from the Bolshevik Revolution and WW1, to Nazism and WW2. He was greatly influenced by Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis, and studied the work of Carl Jung and Anna Freud. Bettel­heim was also interested in the effect of social systems on individuals.

This Prof of Psychology taught at Chicago Uni from 1944 until re­tirement (1973). The most signific­ant part of Bettelheim's career was as Director of Sonia Shankman Orthogenic School, a home for emotion­ally disturb­ed children. He wrote books on both normal and abnormal child psychol­ogy, and his milieu ther­apy was widely used at the Orthog­enic School. His world famous therapy is still widely used in treat­ing em­ot­ion­ally dist­urbed children. There he created a therap­eut­ic environment that supported severely disturbed children, gen­erally human­ising their treatments. The rooms were clean, the child­ren were free to move around and the staff had to accept ALL children’s behaviour. Via his lectures and books Bettel­heim inspired generations of parents to apply psych­ol­ogical principles to their child rearing.

In 1960 Bruno published The Informed Heart: Autonomy in a Mass Age, explaining the relationship between the external en­vironment and mental disorder. He learned from his concen­tra­t­ion camp exp­er­iences where he saw normal people going in­sane in the dehuman­is­ing environment. Bettelheim concluded that only a positive env­ir­on­ment could influen­ce one’s sanity and remedy mental disorders.

He compared his post-camp attempts to preserve a sense of autonomy, in­tegrity and personal freedom Vs life in modern, mass society. Mass U.S or Western Europe societies were dehumanising and depers­on­alising. People had to struggle to maintain their sanity, much like inmates in the camp
   
A Good Enough Parent : A Book on Child-Rearing
1987

His best selling book was Uses of Enchantment: Meaning & Importance of Fairy Tales (1976). There he used Freud­ian psychology to analyse the healthy effects of fairy tales on children’s psyches. It was aw­ar­ded the 1977 Nat­ional Book Award for Con­t­emporary Thought. [NB his psych­o­­an­alytical treatise on fairy tales was said to have been plagiarised].

Bettelheim believed autism had no organic basis; rather that autic children behaved like help­less concentrat­ion camp inmates. The main reason was the negative par­ental interaction with infants dur­ing crit­ical stages in their development. Such children learn­ed to blame themselves for their families’ negative atmos­ph­ere, and withdrew into fantasy worlds. It was mainly the result of upbringing by mothers (and fathers?) who did not want their children to live with them. This in turn caused them to restrict contact with them and failed to establish an em­otional connection.

Bettelheim pres­ented a complex explanation in psych­ological terms, der­ived from the qualitative inv­estigation of clinical cases in his book: The Empty Fort­ress: Infant­ile Autism and the Birth of the Self (1967).

His Refrigerator Mother Theory recognised the association bet­ween the lack of parental attachment and autism, and att­rib­uted childhood autism to unemotional, cold mothering. Bettel­heim’s famous theory of autism enjoyed considerable attention and infl­uen­ce while Bett­el­heim was alive.

Bettelheim's life was an example of the very pro­cess he described, the shocking effects of in­humane treat­ment on psychological hea­lth. He suffered from depression late in life, espec­ially after his wife's death in 1984. In 1987 he suffered a stroke. In 1990, he suicided in Silver Spring MD.

Post-death, some of Bettelheim's work was discredited. Controversy arose surrounding Bettelheim's psychological theories AND his per­sonality. He was known for exploding in anger at students or patients, and that he spanked his patients, des­p­ite publicly rejecting spank­ing as brut­al.

Some Freudian analysts followed Bet­t­elheim's lead and created their own methodologies reg­arding autism. Some ac­cused the mother for the child's autism, and others claim­ed that vict­ims were to be blamed for their own bad luck. When I did 2nd year Psychology at university in 1967, I read and loved all the Bettel­heim books pub­lished before 1966. So now that his theories are often dis­fav­oured, I feel retrospectively cheated. Presumably he wasn't 100% brilliant.

The Uses of Enchantment: Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales
1976


Still, Bettelheim remains widely known for his stud­ies with autistic and emotionally dis­turbed children and made sig­nificant cont­ributions to their treatment. Orthogenic Sch­ool became a model for applying psycho­an­alytic prin­ciples in the treatment of emotionally disturbed child­ren




32 comments:

roentare said...

Bettelheim's arrest by the Gestapo and subsequent imprisonment in Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps highlight his resilience and strength. Even in the harshest conditions, he continued to care for the mental health of his fellow prisoners. His release before the outbreak of World War II marked a new beginning, albeit one marked by personal loss. Bettelheim's experiences reflect the profound impact of historical events on individual lives and underscore his contributions to the field of mental health.

My name is Erika. said...

That must have been frightening times. It's amazing that he came out of those camps and was able to get his life back on track in time. Thanks for sharing this story with us.

Sydney student said...

Since the 1940s when autism was first identified and diagnosed, the causes of communication differences compared with non-autistic people were continually debated. Psychiatrist Dr Leo Kanner, working in Germany, also concluded that Refrigerator Parents were to blame; especially women who attended university or worked after they married. (He finally retracted his theory in 1969, but by then Prof Bruno Bettelheim’s redeveloped version of it was already more popular.

MELODY JACOB said...

Bruno Bettelheim's life story is incredibly complex, with moments of brilliance overshadowed by personal and historical tragedy. His experiences in concentration camps and his subsequent work in psychology, particularly around autism, continue to spark debate. It’s fascinating to see how his past shaped his theories and contributions to mental health.

I just shared a helpful new post; you're welcome to check it out. Wishing you a Merry Christmas!

Liam Ryan said...

Interesting read Hels.
I regard psychoanalysis as mostly hokum. But his theory of autism probably caused a lot of damage and pain.
as roentare said, the whole episode concerning the gestapo and imprisonment in the camps is a remarkable resilience.

River said...

"..just prior to WW2 starting in September 1930..." is that a mistake? Surely it should be 1940.

Margaret D said...

Started off being a brilliant man, then committing suicide, sad, but then his work was rebuked, well some of it. I expect he did good in many ways.

Hels said...

River
I learned touch typing at uni and have never needed to look at the alphabet keys ever since. But now I have intentional tremour in my hands, and am making mistakes with my eyes :(

Hels said...

Liam
I did psychoanalytic studies in first and second year at Melbourne University, way back in the mid 1960s. My Professor of Psychology back then was so old back then, he presumably knew Freud personally.
But look at Bruno's PhD thesis on the history of art, called The Problem of Beauty in Nature and Modern Aesthetics :) Flexible!

Hels said...

roentare
continuing to care for the mental health of his fellow prisoners was heroic, especially since he was suffering himself. But who didn't? I am not remotely surprised that Bettelheim increasingly suffered from depression in the post war years and eventually committed suicide,

Hels said...

Erika
I hadn't heard Bettelheim's name mentioned for ages, so I was quite excited to find more modern material about him.
Perhaps read "The Empty Fortress: Infantile Autism and the Birth of the Self" 1972 at Amazon.

Hels said...

Student
the concept of Refrigerator Parents was not useful for my understanding of child rearing. Married women who were university students and/or workers were soft targets for men, especially psychiatrists, it seems.

Hels said...

Margaret
some of Bettelheim's writing was indeed modified or rejected, but so did almost every other psychologist in the 20th century eg Sigmund Freud, John Bowlby, Mary Ainsworth etc.

Hels said...

Melody
Bettelheim was very brave and thoughtful in promoting his findings, and his books spread the Freudian world in the U.S at its most popular era.
But because he was very keen to understand self-development in autistic children, psychoanalytic writings were attributing a too advanced selfhood to regressed autistic individuals whose behavior had broken down. PS What is the url of your new post?

The Autism History Project https://blogs.uoregon.edu/autismhistoryproject/people/312-2

jabblog said...

I find it odd that he was released from Buchenwald and wonder what sort of deal was made.
I wonder if our understanding of the reasons for neurodivergence is any better now?

Hels said...

jabblog
the most common suggestion was that the USA really didn't want to join the war, so Germany tried very hard to help the US stay neutral.

There was a lot of pressure from Bettelheim's colleagues from Vienna, helping him get a research position at the University of Chicago. When the Germans released the very clever Bettelheim due to this American intervention in 1939, he sailed to the USA with German support.

Rachel Phillips said...

Fortunate for him that he wasn't Russian and returned to Moscow after the war. He might have become part of Stalin's round up and torture and murder of Jewish doctors who Stalin thought were plotting against him in the late 1940s, early '50s. Bettelheim sounds like he had some odd theories on autism.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

Never heard of him he sounds like an interesting and somewhat flawed person and taking his own life shows how his mental health wasn't good

hels said...

Jo-Anne
By the time I was studying psychology in the middle 1960s, I was a feminist type who didn't like psychoanalytic thinking very much. Thus I too didn't know much about Bettelheim. Now we can once again learn from all the old journal articles :)

hels said...

Rachel
Autism and toxic familial environments were modern concepts in the learned world of the 1930s. Even scholars who modified Bettelheim's views later on were grateful for his thinking.

Liam Ryan said...

Hi Hels.
What was your degree subject? Did you study in Australia ? I ask because you've often talked about England and Israel.
I will try to find his work on amazon, if I can.
Also -- just to let you know, I changed my blog name/address to https://thegallerymeerkat.blogspot.com :)

peppylady (Dora) said...

Such a cruel time. I never heard of this person. Going to see what you tube have on him.

diane b said...

Ignorant me has never heard of Bettleheim. I was shocked to read about some of his theories about autism. (It's the mother's fault)

Ирина Полещенко said...

Have a Merry Christmas!
Have good luck, true love,
Joy for you, God’s blessing
And always precious life.

May warmth, faith, and hope
Live in your pure heart.
Say all your problems “Nope”
And always go ahead!

Hels said...

diane
the mother's fault? where was the father; not doing any parenting presumably :(

Hels said...

Liam
My BA (Melb) and MEd (Monash) were in psychology and I worked as a psychologist until 1990. When the clients' depression started to depress me, I decided to go back to Melb University, to do a second degree in history and art history, areas that I had read casually and loved for 20 years.

Apart from living and working in Australia, I lived for 3 years in Israel and for 2 years in Britain. Plus plenty of summer courses at British Universities. Covid and retirement in 2020 came as a bad shock :(

Hels said...

peppylady
you are welcome. I love it when I learn new material from blogs, and even better when other people do.

Hels said...

Irina
many thanks for your warm wishes. I am not Christian, so the best wish of all would be good health to us and to all our readers :)

Andrew said...

I can only say that I admire his tenaciousness and mental capabilities, and it seems he thought outside the box for treatments and was successful.

hels said...

Andrew
He was a brave thinker and practitioner, absolutely. He lived through one of the worst eras in European history, and even escaping in the middle of the war didn't guarantee a safe and happy life. Fortunately his academic work in the US was successful and his book writing prolific.
Plus I thought he was my grandpa when I first saw his photo :)

Katerinas Blog said...

Very interesting read, Hels. The 'refrigerator mother' theory certainly caused a lot of pain to mothers and thankfully it has been disproven. But beyond that, this man certainly suffered a lot, and certainly for science to get to this point, studies and research had to be done and overcome... Thank you for the article, I also read your previous one, extremely interesting

hels said...

Katerina
The fact that very clever men sometimes misinterpreted the data or didn't always have access to the best new data should not diminish their scientific contributions. As long as the scholarly world adapts to the new sciences and remains open to new views, we will continue progressing.