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Françoise Minkowska-Brokman (22 January 1882 – 15 September 1950) was a French Jewish psychiatrist, born in Poland. [1]
She was married to the psychiatrist Eugene Minkowski. Their son was the pediatrician Alexandre Minkowski. Their daughter Jeannine Pilliard-Minkowski wrote a memoir of her parents' life and work.[2]
With her husband, she fled to Zurich at the outbreak of World War I, where they trained as psychiatrists at the Burghölzli Institute directed by Eugen Bleuler.[3]
She was associated with the work of Hermann Rorschach, another of Bleuler's pupils.
She studied the life of Vincent Van Gogh, and argued that the artist's illness was not schizophrenia, but epilepsy.[4]
She established the Centre Françoise Minkowska, a psychiatric institute for refugees and migrants.[5]
References
edit- ^ Yahn, M. (March 1952). "[In Memoriam: Dr. Françoise Minkowska]" (PDF). Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria (in Portuguese). 10 (1): 93–94. doi:10.1590/s0004-282x1952000100007. ISSN 0004-282X. PMID 14953860.
- ^ Pilliard-Minkowski, Jeannine (2009). Eugène Minkowski, 1885-1972 et Françoise Minkowska, 1882-1950 : éclats de mémoire. Paris: Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-10586-7. OCLC 503242223.
- ^ DʼAgostino, Armando (2015). "Eugène Minkowski (1885-1972): The Phenomenological Approach to Schizophrenia". Psychopathology. 48 (6): 421–422. doi:10.1159/000440770. ISSN 1423-033X. PMID 26555462. S2CID 207645280.
- ^ Larchanche, Stéphanie (2020-06-22). "2 Transcultural Practice at Centre Minkowska". Cultural Anxieties. Rutgers University Press. pp. 56–76. doi:10.36019/9780813595412-006. ISBN 978-0-8135-9541-2. S2CID 225020721.
- ^ "Centre Françoise Minkowska". Maison des réfugiés (in French). Retrieved 2022-04-29.