Esther bick biography
Esther Bick
Esther Bick, (1902–1983), born in Przemyśl, Galicia, Poland (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire), was a psychologist and child and adult psychoanalyst who, with Dr. John Bowlby, established the child and adolescent psychotherapy training program at the Tavistock Clinic, London, in 1948.
Biography
Estera Lifsa Wander was born the oldest daughter in an orthodox Jewish family in Poland. She studied in Vienna with Charlotte Bühler and completed her doctorate in 1935. After graduation, she married a medical student Philipp Bick (1904-?); the couple had fled Austria to Switzerland together after the Anschluss, the annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany in 1938. Because she could not get a work permit there, she went to England, without her husband, as a refugee. Most of her family that remained in Poland died later in Nazi concentration camps. She settled in Manchester, working in nurseries during the war.
Research
In 1948 she was invited by John Bowlby to head a child psychotherapy training at the Tavistock Clinic, which had just joined the new British National Health Service. Bick would continue to head the organization until 1960.
She is known for developing the method of psychoanalytic infant observation. Her discovery of the potential of infant observation undertaken within the child's home over the first year or two of life became the foundation of the growth of a psychoanalytic perspective within the observer. It was a conceptual innovation in the history of child and later adult psychoanalytic training and was pioneered in Italy by child neuropsychiatrist Marcella Balconi. It has since become an essential feature of pre-clinical training in child and adult psychotherapy, psychoanalysis and related fields throughout the world.
Selected works
- "Notes on Infant Observation in Psycho-Analytic Training", The International Journal of Psycho-Analysi
Series B2 - Bick, Esther
Reference code
GB BPASA M-B2
Level of description
Series
Name of creator
Bick | Esther
(1903--1983)
Biographical history
Esther Bick was born in Poland and moved to Switzerland where she studied briefly with the psychologist Eugen Bleuler. She later moved to the United Kingdom and was elected a member of the British Psychoanalytical Society in 1953.
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A photograph of Esther Bick can be found in the photograph collection (ref. PH).
Alternative identifier(s)
- Esther Bick (known to her
Item 1 - Esther Bick interview transcript
Reference code
GB BPASA M-B2-1
Title
Esther Bick interview transcript
Date(s)
- c.1975-1983; late 1970s/ early 1980s (Creation)
Extent and medium
1 item (13pp)
Name of creator
Bick | Esther
(1903--1983)
Biographical history
Esther Bick was born in Poland and moved to Switzerland where she studied briefly with the psychologist Eugen Bleuler. She later moved to the United Kingdom and was elected a member of the British Psychoanalytical Society in 1953.
Scope and content
Copy of a typed transcript of an interview with Esther Bick carried out by Alessandra Mancia (née Piontelli) discussing Bick's background, wartime experiences and psychoanalytic career.
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Open access
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Alternative identifier(s)
Esther Bick
1901-1983
'Esther Bick was a gifted teacher and therapist ... those who worked closely with her knew the range of her grasp of the nature of mental processes and the depth of her knowledge of the human condition.'
Donald Meltzer
click here
Nusia Bick with a grandson of Martha Harris, 1978
(photo: Adrian Williams)'She had a vision of how lives might be improved by psychoanalysis, a burning desire to communicate this in her teaching, and little tolerance for attitudes which stood in the way of this.'
Martha Harris
click hereEsther Bick (known to her friends as Nusia) was born of Jewish parents in Poland and studied under Charlotte Bühler in Vienna. Here she began to develop a method for the observation of infants and young children which took into account the need for both scientific objectivity and for making use of the emotional experience of the observer. Most of her immediate family died in the holocaust; however she reached London in 1938, then worked in Manchester where she had some analysis with Michael Balint. She then moved back to London, had analysis with Melanie Klein, and qualified as a psychoanalyst, whilst working in child guidance clinics.
John Bowlby of the Tavistock Clinic asked Bick to provide a training course for analysts, and she developed a course founded on infant observation, with a view to enhancing the capacity to perceive the primitive and fundamental psychic realities of the concrete inner world described by Klein. She regarded this capacity as essential for the analysis of adults as well as of children, and as a result of her conviction, some experience of infant observation became part of most of the British trainings. When she left the Tavistock this course was taken over and fully developed by Martha Harris, who together with Donald Meltzer promoted Bick's infant observation techniques in relation to analytic training and therapy in other countries: in particu