1. Family and Childhood: 1890–1909 2. The Struggle for Education: 1909–1914 3. War: 1914–1916 4. Revolution: 1916–1917 5. Escape: 1917–1919 6. Embracing the New World: 1919–1922 7. ‘The Great Columbia University’: 1922–1923 8. 'Complete Moral Independence’: 1923–1926 9. Bloomingdale and Berlin: 1926–1931 10. Private Practice: 1931–1933 11. Alternatives: 1933–1935 12. Divided Attention: 1935–1937 13. ‘World affairs’: 1937–1939 14. Other Affairs: 1939–1940
Caroline Zilboorg is a life member of Clare Hall, Cambridge University, and a scholar of the British Psychoanalytic Council. Her books include Richard Aldington and H.D.: Their Lives in Letters, The Masks of Mary Renault: A Literary Biography, and the biographical novel Transgressions. She lives in Brittany, France, where she continues to write.
"Based on careful reading of a remarkable collection of detailed
sources, as well as many fascinating photographs, this meticulously
researched and beautifully written biography of the psychiatrist
and historian Gregory Zilboorg portrays the life of a remarkable
man. The story is nicely embedded into a fascinating social,
political, medical, and cultural context, one that includes
politics, war, religion, and a psychoanalytic world that has been
too-often forgotten. This biography will be of interest to a wide
range of readers, including medical historians, psychiatrists, and
anyone interested in one fascinating person’s journey from
pre-revolutionary Russia to the twentieth-century United
States."—Joel Howell, MD, PhD, Elizabeth Farrand Professor of the
History of Medicine at the University of Michigan "There are
powerful myths about daughters in search of fathers. This biography
equals them. With lucidity, intensity, and vivid words the author
Dr. Caroline Zilboorg sets out, 60 years after his passing, to find
and better know her father, the psychoanalyst Dr. Gregory Zilboorg.
Her search yields a generous gift to readers. Gregory Zilboorg was
an extraordinarily brilliant man with a personal history extending
from service in the ill-fated Menshevik government of revolutionary
Russia to an exceptional American career as a psychiatrist, medical
historian, and spellbinding public speaker. To tell his life is
also to tell much of the history, not without conflicts, of
Freudian analysis in America. Caroline Zilboorg engages us as her
companions in a most fruitful search for identity."—Roger Lipsey,
author of Make Peace Before the Sun Goes Down: The Long Encounter
of Thomas Merton and His Abbot, James Fox "How does a poor Russian
Jew become a revolutionary socialist, an orthodox Freudian, and a
devout Catholic, in that order? Read Caroline Zilboorg’s biography
of her father Gregory and find out! In addition to providing
illuminating commentaries on the evolution of his work in the
history of psychiatry, and the social issues that animated Gregory
Zilboorg as a public intellectual, Caroline Zilboorg shows a keen
and sensitive grasp of the vagaries of Jewish family life in
Czarist Russia, the vicissitudes and horrors of the Russian
Revolution, the anguish of immigrants adapting to America, and the
sheer nastiness of psychoanalytic politics. This is a searching,
sympathetic, and richly embroidered biography of a courageous,
creative, generous, yet much-misunderstood man. It is ‘must
reading’ for anyone interested in the history of psychiatry,
psychoanalysis, and the Jewish-American immigrant
experience."—Daniel Burston, Founding Scholar, British
Psychoanalytic Council; author of Psychoanalysis, Politics and the
Postmodern University and The Wing of Madness: The Life and Work of
R.D. Laing
"Based on careful reading of a remarkable collection of detailed
sources, as well as many fascinating photographs, this meticulously
researched and beautifully written biography of the psychiatrist
and historian Gregory Zilboorg portrays the life of a remarkable
man. The story is nicely embedded into a fascinating social,
political, medical, and cultural context, one that includes
politics, war, religion, and a psychoanalytic world that has been
too-often forgotten. This biography will be of interest to a wide
range of readers, including medical historians, psychiatrists, and
anyone interested in one fascinating person’s journey from
pre-revolutionary Russia to the twentieth-century United
States."—Joel Howell, MD, PhD, Elizabeth Farrand Professor of the
History of Medicine at the University of Michigan "There are
powerful myths about daughters in search of fathers. This biography
equals them. With lucidity, intensity, and vivid words the author
Dr. Caroline Zilboorg sets out, 60 years after his passing, to find
and better know her father, the psychoanalyst Dr. Gregory Zilboorg.
Her search yields a generous gift to readers. Gregory Zilboorg was
an extraordinarily brilliant man with a personal history extending
from service in the ill-fated Menshevik government of revolutionary
Russia to an exceptional American career as a psychiatrist, medical
historian, and spellbinding public speaker. To tell his life is
also to tell much of the history, not without conflicts, of
Freudian analysis in America. Caroline Zilboorg engages us as her
companions in a most fruitful search for identity."—Roger Lipsey,
author of Make Peace Before the Sun Goes Down: The Long Encounter
of Thomas Merton and His Abbot, James Fox "How does a poor Russian
Jew become a revolutionary socialist, an orthodox Freudian, and a
devout Catholic, in that order? Read Caroline Zilboorg’s biography
of her father Gregory and find out! In addition to providing
illuminating commentaries on the evolution of his work in the
history of psychiatry, and the social issues that animated Gregory
Zilboorg as a public intellectual, Caroline Zilboorg shows a keen
and sensitive grasp of the vagaries of Jewish family life in
Czarist Russia, the vicissitudes and horrors of the Russian
Revolution, the anguish of immigrants adapting to America, and the
sheer nastiness of psychoanalytic politics. This is a searching,
sympathetic, and richly embroidered biography of a courageous,
creative, generous, yet much-misunderstood man. It is ‘must
reading’ for anyone interested in the history of psychiatry,
psychoanalysis, and the Jewish-American immigrant
experience."—Daniel Burston, Founding Scholar, British
Psychoanalytic Council; author of Psychoanalysis, Politics and the
Postmodern University and The Wing of Madness: The Life and Work of
R.D. Laing'I recommend this biographical work without hesitation.
Caroline Zilboorg’s excellent work will never be surpassed. This is
a must read for anyone interested in European history, the early
pioneers in psychoanalysis, the history of the psychoanalytic
movement, the history of World War I, the Russia Revolution, and
the Jewish diaspora.'— Ilonka Venier Alexander, British Journal of
Psychotherapy
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