Jacob Moreno | |
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Born | Iacob Levy May 18, 1889 |
Died | May 14, 1974(1974-05-14) (aged 84) Beacon, New York, U.S. |
Alma mater | University of Vienna |
Known for | Sociometry,psychodrama |
Spouses |
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Scientific career | |
Fields | Psychiatry,psychology,psychotherapy,social psychology |
Jacob Levy Moreno (bornIacob Levy; May 18, 1889 – May 14, 1974) was a Romanian-Americanpsychiatrist,psychosociologist, andeducator, the founder ofpsychodrama, and the foremost pioneer ofgroup psychotherapy. During his lifetime, he was recognized as one of the leadingsocial scientists.
Jacob Levy Moreno was born inBucharest in theKingdom of Romania. His father was Moreno Nissim Levy, aSephardiJewish merchant born in 1856 in Plevna in theOttoman Empire (todayPleven,Bulgaria). Jacob's grandfather Buchis had moved to Plevna fromConstantinople, where his ancestors had settled after they left Spain in 1492. It is thought that the Morenos left Plevna for Bucharest during theRusso-Turkish War of 1877–1878, following the Plevna rabbiHaim Bejarano in search of a more hospitable environment. Jacob Moreno's mother, Paulina Iancu or Wolf, was also a Sephardi Jew, born in 1873, and originated fromCălăraşi, Romania.[1]
In 1895, a time of great intellectual creativity and political turmoil, the family moved toVienna. He studiedmedicine,mathematics, andphilosophy at theUniversity of Vienna, becoming aDoctor of Medicine in 1917. He had rejected Freudian theory while still a medical student, and became interested in the potential of group settings for therapeutic practice.[2]
In his autobiography, Moreno wrote of encounter withSigmund Freud in 1912. "I attended one of Freud's lectures. He had just finished an analysis of a telepathic dream. As the students filed out, he singled me out from the crowd and asked me what I was doing. I responded, 'Well, Dr. Freud, I start where you leave off. You meet people in the artificial setting of your office. I meet them on the street and in their homes, in their natural surroundings. You analyze their dreams. I give them the courage to dream again. You analyze and tear them apart. I let them act out their conflicting roles and help them to put the parts back together again.'"[3]
In Brooklyn, New York, Moreno married Beatrice Beecher in 1926. The marriage ended in divorce, and in 1938 he married Florence Bridge, with whom he had one child, Regina Moreno (born 1939). They too were divorced, and he marriedZerka Toeman in 1949, with whom he had one childJonathan D. Moreno (born 1952).[4]
While living in Vienna in the early 1900s Moreno started animprovisational theater company,Stegreiftheater, the Theater of Spontaneity[5]: 72 where he formulated a form of psychotherapy he called psychodrama, which employed improvised dramatizations,role-plays and other therapeutic, spontaneous dramatic expressions that utilized and unleashed the spontaneity and creativity of the group and its individual members.[5]: 15, 16 Moreno saw "psychodrama as the next logical step beyondpsychoanalysis." It was "an opportunity to get into action instead of just talking, to take the role of the important people in our lives to understand them better, to confront them imaginatively in the safety of the therapeutic theater, and most of all to become more creative and spontaneous human beings."[5]: 50
In his bookWho Shall Survive? (Preludes, p.xxviii) Moreno wrote of the genesis of his Group Psychotherapy in 1913–14 in Vienna, formulating his ideas while working with groups of prostitutes.
Moving to the US in 1925, he began working in New York City. There, Moreno worked on his theory ofinterpersonal relations, and the development of his work inpsychodrama,sociometry,group psychotherapy,sociodrama, andsociatry. In his autobiography he wrote "only in New York, the melting pot of the nations, the vast metropolis, with all its freedom from all preconceived notions, could I be free to pursue sociometric group research in the grand style I had envisioned".[6]
TheNew York Times wrote "He found that acceptance of his theories was slow, particularly because some colleagues deplored his showmanship."[7]
He worked at the Plymouth Institute, Brooklyn, and atMount Sinai Hospital. In 1929, he founded an Impromptu Theater atCarnegie Hall and later did work at the Guild Theater. He made studies of sociometry atSing Sing Prison in 1931.
In 1932, Moreno first introduced group psychotherapy to theAmerican Psychiatric Association, and co-authored the monographGroup Method and Group Pschotherapy withHelen Hall Jennings.[8] He and Jennings were the first to use astochastic network model (or, "chance sociogram", as they called it),[9][10] predating theErdős–Rényi model and the network model ofAnatol Rapoport.[11]
In 1936, he founded the Beacon Hill Sanitarium, and the adjacent Therapeutic Theater.[7]
In 1937–1938, he taught a university seminar on psychodrama ("Introduction to Psychodrama") atColumbia University under the auspices of the Guidance Laboratory,Teachers College. He later taught a seminar "On Sociometry" with and by invitation of Dr.Alvin Saunders Johnson at theNew School for Social Research.[12]
For the next 40 years he developed and introduced his Theory of Interpersonal Relations and tools for social sciences he called 'sociodrama', 'psychodrama', 'sociometry', and 'sociatry'. In his monograph entitled, "The Future of Man's World", he describes how he developed these sciences to counteract "the economicmaterialism ofMarx, the psychological materialism of Freud, and the technological materialism" of our modernindustrial age.[13] In 1954, he was a founding member of the International Committee on Group Psychotherapy, which later transformed into the International Association of Group Psychotherapy.[14]
His autobiography describes his position as "threefold:
Moreno died at home in Beacon, N.Y., in 1974, aged 84. He chose to die by abstaining from all food and water after a long illness. His ashes are buried atFeuerhalle Simmering in Vienna. His epitaph, at his request, reads "DER MANN, DER FREUDE UND LACHEN IN DIE PSYCHIATRIE BRACHTE" (The man who brought joy and laughter to psychiatry).[15]
There is evidence that the methods of J. L. Moreno have held up respectably over time.[16] Subsequent research from theUniversity of Vienna shows the enormous influence that Moreno's theory of theEncounter (Invitations to an Encounter, 1914) had on the development ofMartin Buber's I-Thou philosophy, and Buber's influence on philosophy, theology, and psychology.[17] His wife,Zerka Moreno, wrote: "While it is true that Buber broadened the idea of the Encounter, he did not create the instruments for it to occur." Moreno "produced the various instruments we now use for facilitating the human encounter, sociometry, group psychotherapy, psychodrama, and sociodrama".[18] Zerka was herself an expert in psychodrama and sociometry, and continued her late husband's work.[19]
With training centers and institutes on nearly every continent, there are many thousands of students who are expanding and developing training and teaching the Morenean Arts and Sciences across the disciplines, to more fully realize Moreno's vision to make these social sciences available for "the whole of [hu]mankind."[20]
Moreno is also widely credited as one of the founders of the discipline ofsocial network analysis, the branch of sociology that deals with the quantitative evaluation of an individual's role in a group or community by analysis of the network of connections between them and others.[5]: 21, 22
His 1934 bookWho Shall Survive? contains some of the earliest graphical depictions of social networks (sociograms). In this book, he introduced a famous explanation, why a pandemic of runaways emerged at theNew York Training School for Girls inHudson.