Bierer, Dr Joshua
- Bierer, Joshua (1901-1984)
- Date:
- 1919-1984
- Reference:
- PP/BIE
- Archives and manuscripts
About this work
Description
Very few papers survive from Bierer's career, and there is no record of his involvement with the International Journal of Social Psychiatry, Institute of Social Psychiatry, British Association of Social Psychiatry, or Jewish organisations, nor of his hospital work.
However, the surviving papers contain a core of valuable material, especially drafts (dated 1978-1983) of Bierer's unpublished autobiography 'A Pedlar of Dreams' detailing his family background, his flight from Austria in the face of Nazism, and his approach to psychiatry.
His papers also include inter alia:
For further archival material relating to Dr Bierer at the Wellcome Library, see PP/SHF/E/7/1 and MS.7913/43.
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Contributors
Arrangement
The original order of the papers as acquired has been largely retained, except for minor alterations which have been recorded in the relevant catalogue records. The papers have been arranged into the following sections:
Titles in "quotation marks" were written on the original files, all other titles were given by the cataloguer based on the material.
Acquisition note
Biographical note
Bierer was born in 1901 in Radautz, Austria to a distinguished Jewish medical family, and trained in Individual Psychology with Professor Alfred Adler and Dr A. Neuer. In 1928 he was appointed to the Teaching Institute in Individual Psychology in Berlin, and subsequently carried out pioneering work in psychotherapy at mental hospitals in Vienna.
In the 1930s Bierer left Austria for Palestine and then England. In 1938 he was appointed as the first psychotherapist in a public mental hospital (Runwell, Essex). He served in the Royal Army Medical Corps for most of the Second World War. In 1946 he founded the social psychotherapy centre at Marlborough Day Hospital, the first hospital of its kind. He was also the founder and editor of the International Journal of Social Psychiatry (1955 on), as well as founder and chairman of both the Institute of Social Psychiatry and the British Association of Social Psychiatry. Dr Bierer died in 1984.
Terms of use
Appraisal note
Ownership note
Selected volumes from Dr Bierer's collection of publications (including much material on addictions, alcoholism and the practice of social pyschiatry in general) were transferred to the Wellcome Library along with his archive in August 2009.
Further papers are held at the Planned Environment Therapy Archives and Special Collections: https://archives.mulberrybush.org.uk/records/BIERER.
Permanent link
Identifiers
Accession number
- 1690