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Encyclopedia > Arno Gruen
Arno Gruen
Arno Gruen

Arno Gruen is a Swiss-German psychologist and psychoanalyst. He was born in Berlin in 1923 and emigrated to the United States as a child in 1936. After completing his graduate studies in psychology at New York University, he trained in psychoanalysis under Theodor Reik. Dr. Gruen has held many teaching posts, including seventeen years as professor of psychology at Rutgers University. Since 1979 he has lived and practiced in Switzerland. Widely published in German, his groundbreaking first book to be released in English, The Betrayal of the Self, was published by Grove Press in 1988. Image File history File linksMetadata Arno_Gruen. ... Image File history File linksMetadata Arno_Gruen. ... A psychologist is a scientist who studies psychology, the systematic investigation of the human behavior and mental processes. ... 1936 (MCMXXXVI) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will take you to calendar). ...


Gruen's place in the history of psychology can be summarized as follows. According to Freud, human beings are born with an innate tendency to destruction and violence; throughout his scholarly and clinical career, Prof. Gruen has challenged that assumption, arguing instead that at the root of evil lies self-hatred, a rage originating in a self-betrayal that begins in childhood, when autonomy is surrendered in exchange for the "love" of those who wield power over us.


To share in that subjugating power, we create a false self, an image of ourselves that springs from a powerful and deep-seated sense of fear. Gruen traces this pattern of adaptation and smoldering rebellion through a number of case studies, sociological phenomena -- from Nazism to Reaganomics -- and literary works. The insanity this attitude produces, unfortunately, goes widely unrecognized precisely because it has become the "realism" that modern society inculcates into its members.


Gruen warns, however, that escape from these patterns lies not simply in rebellion, for rebels often remain emotionally tied to the objects of their rebellion, but in the development of a personal autonomy and a relinquishing of all forms of self-numbing and self-deception. His elegant and far-reaching conclusion, elaborated in the books and essays listed below, is that while autonomy and authenticity are not easily attained, their absence proves catastrophic to both individual and society.


Works

  • Autonomy and Identification: The Paradox of their Opposition, The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, Vol. 49 1968 (4), p. 648; 1968
  • The Betrayal of the Self (New York: Grove Press, 1988). ISBN 0-8021-1017-7
  • The Insanity of Normality: Realism as Sickness (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1992). ISBN 0-8021-1169-6

Book reviews

Links

Page with essays of Arno Gruen



 
 

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