Ángel Garma

Ángel Garma Zubizarreta, most widely known as Ángel Garma (24 June 1904, Bilbao - 29 January 1993, Buenos Aires) was a Spanish-Argentinian psychoanalyst who has been called the 'founder' of psychoanalysis in Argentina. He wrote on psychosis, psychosomatic illnesses such as gastric ulcers and headaches, and dream interpretation.

Life

Born in Spain of a Basque family, Garma studied medicine in Madrid. He then studied in Germany under Robert Gaupp and Karl Bonhoeffer and underwent analysis with Theodor Reik at the Berlin Institute of Psychoanalysis. A 1931 paper to the Berlin Psychoanalytic Association proposed - in contrast to Freud, who held that psychotics repressed reality to satisfy the id - that psychotics repress the id more drastically than do neurotics. He practiced as a psychoanalyst in Spain from 1931 to 1936 before moving to France and finally emigrating to Argentina in 1938. He helped found the Argentinian Psychoanalytical Association (APA) in late 1942, serving as its first president from 1942 to 1944, and the journal Revista de psicoanálisis.

Works

References

  1. ^ Iñaki Markez, El bilbaíno Ángel Garma (1904-1993): fundador del psicoanálisis argentino, Bilbao: BBK, 2005
  2. ^ a b R. Horacio Etchegoyen, 'Angel Garma', Gale Doctionary of Psychoanalysis. Reprinted online at answers.com.
  3. ^ Claudine Geissmann-Chambon and Pierre Geissmann, A History of Child Psychoanalysis, Routledge, 1998, p.281