Boris Cyrulnik

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Boris Cyrulnik
Boris Cyrulnik 2014.jpg
Cyrulnik in 2014
Born (1937-07-26) 26 July 1937 (age 86)
Nationality French
EducationMedicine (psychiatry)
Occupation(s)Physician, psychiatrist, professor, writer
Notable work Psychological resilience

Boris Cyrulnik (birth 26 July 1937 in Bordeaux) is a French doctor, ethologist, neurologist, and psychiatrist.

Contents

As a Jewish child during World War II, he was entrusted to a foster family for his own protection. In 1943 he was taken with adults in a Nazi-led capture in Bordeaux. He avoided detention by hiding for a while in the restrooms and later being hidden from Nazi searches as a farm boy under the name Jean Laborde until the end of the war. Both of his parents were arrested and murdered during World War II. His own survival motivated his career in psychiatry. [1] He studied medicine at the University of Paris. He has written several books of popular science on psychology. He is known in France for developing and explaining to the public the concept of Psychological resilience.

He is a professor at the University of the South, Toulon-Var. He was awarded the 2008 Prix Renaudot de l'essai.

Works

In French

English translation: The Dawn of Meaning
English translation: The Whispering of Ghosts: Trauma and Resilience, 2005.
English translation: Talking of Love on the Edge of a Precipice, 2007.

In English

Translation of: La Naissance du sens, ed. Hachette Littérature, 1998 ISBN   978-2-01-278891-6.
Translation of: Le Murmure des fantômes, ed. Odile Jacob, 2003.
Translation of: Parler d'amour au bord du gouffre, ed. Odile Jacob, 2004.

In German

Translation of: Pourquoi l'amour guérit les plaies.
Translation of: Corps et âme.
Translation of: Mourir de dire: La honte, ed. Odile Jacob, 2010 ISBN   978-2-7381-2505-7.
Translation of: Sauve-toi, la vie t'appelle, ed. Odile Jacob, 2012 ISBN   978-2-7381-2862-1.

Prefaces

Collected works

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References

  1. Boris Cyrulnik "Je me souviens…, Publisher: L'Esprit du temps, collection. " Textes essentiels ", 2009 (Publisher: Odile Jacob – poches, 2010) ( ISBN   978-2-7381-2471-5).