James Anthony (psychoanalyst)

Elwyn James Anthony (21 January 1916 – 10 December 2014) was a British psychoanalyst best known for his work on resilience and invulnerability risk in children, particularly those whose parents had serious mental illnesses. He was one of two founders, along with S. H. Foulkes, off the field of group psychotherapy. As a prolific writer, he authored 320 research articles and 18 books, many of which were translated into diverse languages. James Anthony was a training psychoanalyst who studied in London where he began a distinguished career as a child psychotherapist and psychiatrist. He studied child development under Jean Piaget and, after leaving the Maudsley Hospital, occupied the Ittleson Chair of Child Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis. He later became Director of Psychotherapy at Chestnut Lodge, where he developed a program of group psychotherapy for adolescent inpatients.

James Anthony in Seville, Spain

He was President of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP), President of the International Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Allied Professions, the Association for Child Analysis, and the World Association of Infant Psychiatry.[1]

Anthony was recruited in England in 1958 to hold the world’s first endowed chair in Child Psychiatry, the Blanche F. Ittleson Professorship at Washington University in St. Louis where he conducted most of his longitudinal research. His work in St. Louis at the Edison Child Study Center included many grants from foundations and the NIMH. His collaboration with Foulkes, who became his training analyst, began at Northfield Military Hospital and in the 1950s he became a founder member of the Group Analytic Society.

Anthony was born in Calcutta, India and educated by Jesuits in Darjeeling, India, from the age of four, before immigrating to England for medical training. He was a protégé and collaborator with Jean Piaget, Anna Freud, Erik Erikson, John Bowlby, and Sir Aubrey Lewis who, throughout his early career, introduced Anthony to international and cultural aspects of child development.

He attended medical school at King's College London during the Second World War, including delivering babies during the bombings of London. His first assignment as an officer was to work at Northfield Military Hospital with S.H. Foulkes, dealing with "shell shocked soldiers" where they started rudimentary group psychotherapy. Later, he was transferred to Hong Kong as chief medical officer for Southeast Asia and was charged with setting up day care centers for Japanese children who survived the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. When he returned home from the war, he continued his psychiatric and child psychiatric training at the Maudsley Hospital and received the Gold Medal award from the University of London. He was later a member of the Royal College of Psychiatry and his numerous lectureships included a standing appointment at the London School of Economics.

He was a senior lecturer at the Hampstead Clinic and received a Nuffield Fellowship to study with Jean Piaget. At the same time, his collaboration with S.H. Foulkes on Groups led them to co-author "Group Psychotherapy: the Psychoanalytic Approach" considered to this day as the bible of group psychotherapy with many reprintings.

During his presidency of the International Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Allied Professions, he formed study groups of colleagues from around the world to learn from various cultures about child development and childhood disorders. He initiated this work, led it, and arranged for funding. This effort was the basis of several of his books. As a testament to his lasting legacy and expertise, this spring last, two books on the subject contain introductions by Anthony.

As the president of AACAP, he continued his commitment on international collaboration, with both a joint meeting in Mexico, and in leading two large groups to China on the brink of its opening to the West. He collaborated with future AACAP Presidents and co-led other trips including to the USSR. As a result of this trip, for the first time ever, the USSR sent 8 of its researchers to participate in the AACAP’s annual meeting.

Anthony also formed a study group to mentor, nurture, and support young researchers in the beginning of their careers. He was also responsible for the first of what would later be known as the Presidential Interview at the AACAP Annual Meeting, when he interviewed Joan and Erik Erikson. His appointment to the Work Group on Consumer Issues led to the development of AACAP’s Facts for Families, which have been translated into multiple languages. Also during Anthony’s AACAP Presidency, a successful offer was made to purchase our (AACAP’s) current headquarters.

He maintained a private practice until the age of 90. He was a member of the British, St. Louis, Chicago, and Washington DC Psychoanalytic Societies.

He was married to Ethel Frances until her death in 1983. They have four children, eleven grandchildren, and ten great grandchildren.[citation needed] He was married for 30 years to Virginia Quinn Anthony, former executive director of AACAP. Anthony died on December 10, 2014.

References

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  1. ^ "Paid Notice: Memorials ANTHONY, E. JAMES. THE CHILD MIND INSTITUTE MOURNS THE LOSS OF E. JAMES ANTHONY, MD ONE OF THE WORLD'S GREAT CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRISTS AND HUSBAND OF OUR DEAR FRIEND, VIRGINIA ANTHONY, FORMER EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY. JAMES WAS AN EXTRAORDINARY CLINICIAN, WRITER, TEACHER, AND RESEARCHER. HE WILL BE MISSED BY THOUSANDS OF PATIENTS AND THEIR FAMILIES, HUNDREDS OF COLLEAGUES WORLDWIDE, AND BY HIS ADORING FAMILY. BROOKE GARBER NEIDICH, CHAIR HAROLD S. KOPLEWICZ, MD, PRESIDENT CHILD MIND INSTITUTE 1". query.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2023-08-21.
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