Gustav Bychowski

Gustaw Bychowski Gustav Bychowski (in Polish, Gustaw Bychowski, born 1895 in Warsaw, Congress Poland, died April 3, 1972, in Fez, Morocco) was a Polish-American psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and author. he was the son of the distinguished neurologist Shneor Zalman Bychowski (1865-1934). He studied for a medical degree at the University of Zurich and studied psychiatry at Burghölzli, the University of Zurich's psychiatric hospital. He then studied psychoanalysis under Sigmund Freud in Vienna before moving back to Warsaw in 1921 and translating Freud's ''Introduction to Psychoanalysis'' into Polish.

During his career, he wrote a large number of books on psychoanalysis including ''Evil in Man: The Anatomy of Hate and Violence'' and ''Dictators and Disciples from Caesar to Stalin''. The latter looks specifically at Julius Caesar, Oliver Cromwell, Maximilien Robespierre, Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin.

The psychoanalyst Frank M. Lachmann describes Bychowski as not being a traditional Freudian: "Here was a Freudian analyst who was clearly more interested in connecting with the patient and finding areas of strength than in demonstrating how clever he could be in eliciting psychopathology". Lachmann writes that Bychowski eventually adopted similar views to that of Heinz Kohut.

Amongst his patients was noted American filmmaker James Toback. Provided by Wikipedia
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    Psicología de los dictadores : de César a Stalin / by Bychowski, Gustav 1895-1972

    Published 1968
    Book