Julian de Ajuriaguerra

Julian de Ajuriaguerra
Born (1911-01-07)7 January 1911
Bilbao, Spain
Died May 23, 1993(1993-05-23) (aged 82)
Villefranque (Pyrénées-Atlantiques)
Citizenship Spain, France
Nationality Spanish, French
Fields Neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, psychanalysis, child psychiatry, sectoral psychiatry
Institutions Collège de France
Bel-Air Psychiatric Hospital
Influences Gaetan Gatian de Clérambault, Pierre Janetin
Influenced Mario Christian Meyer, Alain Berthoz

Julian de Ajuriaguerra (born January 7, 1911 at Bilbao (Spain) and died at Villefranque (Pyrénées-Atlantiques) on March 23, 1993) was a French Basque neuropsychiatrist and psychoanalyst of Spanish Basque origin. He is one of the pioneers of "sectoral psychiatry" in France.

Biography

Brought up in Bilbao in a traditional family, he left for Paris at the age of 16, where he studied Medicine. He becomes a non-resident student in psychiatry at Sainte-Anne Hospital. Because of his status as a foreign student, he was not paid until 1950, so he was compelled to work on night duty until the prohibition of this practice under the Vichy regime.

He attended the seminars on Gaetan Gatian de Clérambault and Pierre Janetin particular, and took an interest in the Surrealists. He finished his medical studies both in France and Spain, where the Civil War prevented him from taking his final exams.

His thesis, pain in the disease of the central nervous system, concluded in 1936, and was prefaced by Jean Lhermitte, for whom he would become assistant in the Laboratory of the anatomy of the nervous system from 1938 to 1946. A member of the French Resistance during the war, he passed the aggregation examination and was appointed professor of neurology and psychiatry.

Ajuriaguerra met the psychoanalyst René Diatkine, with whom he opened a consulting office for psychomotricity and language problems. They created the scientific magazine Child Psychiatry. He then underwent a psychoanalysis with Sacha Nacht.

In 1950, Ajuriaguerra obtained French Nationality which allowed him to pass the "baccalaureat" examination and obtain the recognition of his title as a doctor.

In 1959, he replaced Professor Ferdinand Morel at the Bel-Air psychiatric hospital in Geneva, which he directed until 1975. He enabled psychiatry in Geneva to develop and become a reference. Psychoanalysts worked together with neurologists in spirit of emulation and collaboration rarely attained in this domain. He also perfected his technique of relaxation, the "Ajuriaguerra method".

He then left Geneva for Paris, where he became professor at the Collège de France. This institution provided Prof. Dr. Ajuriaguerra the support to express the deep insight of his neuropsychiatric and humanistic approach. He then became a reference and has influenced a whole new generation of researchers in medical and life sciences, as illustrated in the work of Prof. Dr. Mario Christian Meyer.[1]

He continued an intense activity of research and teaching both in France and Basque country. In 1986, he terminated his professional activities due to illness.

Tribute

Tribute to the work of Julian de Ajuriaguerra: A precursor of the current movement of cognitive sciences

2011 is celebrated the centenary of the birth of Julian Ajuriaguerra (1911–2011) and a tribute will be made on 10 and 11 June in Bayonne (France) and Bilbao (Spain). The objective of these days is to recall the life and work of Julian de Ajuriaguerra in their topicality.[2] Clinicians, researchers and representatives of associations from Biscay, Bordeaux, Dijon, Lyon and Geneva will participate in these encounters.

Publications

Bibliography

References

  1. In the preface of Meyer's book by UNESCO, Ajuriaguerra wrote: "He introduces a unique and successful orientation to the understanding of gesturality and language in a neuropsychomotor and semiotic approach of the body.... child development through education, health, and the society… opening on the necessary valorization and fulfillment of unprivileged human groups..."
  2. http://eusko-ikaskuntza.org/fr/cursosyjornadas/listado/object.php?o=19986&actual=3

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.