Paul Watzliwak, noted author and psychologist, and died on March 31, 2007 in Palo Alto, California. He was 85 years old, and he had recently retired from the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto where he had been a mainstay of their faculty since 1960. Click the title above to read more about his life and contributions to analytical psychology.
Paul Watzliwak, noted author and psychologist, and died on March 31,
2007 in Palo Alto, California. He was 85 years old, and he had
recently retired from the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto where
he had been a mainstay of their faculty since 1960.
Watzliwak
was an internationally known expert in communications theory, family
systems and family psychotherapy, and the author of 18 books and over
150 articles which had been translated into 80 languages. His work
with Gregory Bateson, Don Jackson, and John Weakland in the double bind
theory of schizophrenia has long been recognized as a classic in the
field. His book "Pragmatics of Communication" was a bestseller in
Europe, and he lectured widely all over the world.
Perhaps what
is not so well known is that Watzliwak originally trained at the Jung
Institute in Zürich, graduating from there in 1954. Paul was born and
raised in Villach, Austria, and he received his Ph.D. in philology from
Venice in 1949. Paul spoke five languages fluently. After receiving
his Ph.D. he became a student at the Jung Institute in Zürich in the
very early days when there were few students. He did part of his
Jungian training in Rome where he was in analysis with Ernst Bernhard,
which counted towards his Diploma Training at the Institute.
After
receiving his diploma from the Jung Institute Paul taught for one year
in India and another year in El Salvador. In 1958 at the first IAAP
Congress in Zürich John Rosen, the author of " Direct Analysis", was an
invited speaker to the Congress. Paul went to work with Rosen in
Philadelphia in 1958 and then moved to the Mental Research Institute
where he spent the remainder of his professional life. He he was a
teacher in the department of psychiatry at Stanford and a frequent
lecturer besides the author of the above-mentioned books.
One
important contribution to English-speaking Jungians was his translation
of the only paper which Toni Wolff wrote entitled, "Structural Forms of
the Feminine Psyche". This was an important paper in the early
training of Jungian analysts. Although Paul disavowed all his earlier
Jungian training, he remained a member of the IAAP for many years, Jim
Hillman had him lecture at the Jung Institute in Zürich during the
early 1960s, and he spent roughly a decade of his professional life as
a Jungian.
Thomas B. Kirsch, M.D.
On the Passing of Paul Watzliwak
- Details
- Written by Thomas B. Kirsch, MD