François Tosquelles Explained

Honorific Prefix:Dr.
Francesc Tosquelles Llauradó
Birth Date:22 August 1912
Birth Place:Reus, Catalonia, Kingdom of Spain
Death Place:Granges-sur-Lot, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Occupation:Psychiatrist
Employer:Institut Pere Mata
Party:Workers and Peasants' Bloc
POUM
Awards:Medalla al Trabajo President Macià (1994)

Francesc Tosquelles (Reus, August 22, 1912 – Granges-sur-Lot, September 25, 1994), also known as François Tosquelles due to having lived in France for many years, was a Catalan psychiatrist.[1]

Life

During the Spanish Civil War, Tosquelles fought on the Republican side for the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification.[2] During World War II, he was the doctor at the psychiatric hospital of Saint-Alban-sur-Limagnole, Lozère, France.

He is credited as one of the creators of institutional psychotherapy, an influential movement in the second half of the 20th century. His 1948 doctoral thesis for the University of Paris was titled 'The Psychopathology of Lived Experience' - "Part gestalt psychology, part phenomenology, part neurobiology, part psychoanalysis, it revived the Hippocratic notion of the medic–philosopher – ."

After experiencing military occupations throughout his lifetime (German in France, Spanish in Catalonia, Francoist in Spain, and Stalinist in the Spanish communist parties), he concluded that "occupation" was not simply a historical reality but created a psychic structure in the individual, and that to achieve freedom, one must proceed by "disoccupation".

One of his students was the Martinican psychiatrist and later revolutionary activist Frantz Fanon, who used Tosquelles' techniques with some success in the mid-1950s while living in Blida, Algeria.

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. Web site: La Déconniatrie les Abattoirs. 2021-10-14. www.lesabattoirs.org. 14 October 2021 .
  2. Web site: Éditions d'une - François Tosquelles, Psychopathologie et matérialisme dialectique. editionsdune.fr. 2019-09-17.

Further reading