1st Edition

The Women of Anna Freud’s War Nurseries Their Lives and Work

By Christiane Ludwig-Körner Copyright 2024
232 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

232 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

232 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

In this volume, Christiane Ludwig-Körner describes the lives and work of the staff members of the War Nurseries set up and run by Anna Freud and Dorothy Burlingham during the Second World War. The Women of Anna Freud’s War Nurseries looks in turn at each of the women who helped run the homes in Hampstead: Alice Goldberger, Sophie and Gertrud Dann, Manna Friedmann, Anneliese Schnurmann, Ilse... Read more

Introduction: From the Edith Jackson Nursery to the War Nurseries  1. Alice Goldberger (15.8.1897–22.2.1986) – Mother of the Lingfield House Children 2. Sophie (3.3.1900–18.12.1993) and Gertrud Dann (27.5.1908–2.4.1998) – Home for the children from Theresienstadt 3. Manna (Marta) Friedmann (8.1.1915–16.11.2013) – Surviving to Ensuring the Survival of Others 4. Anneliese Schnurmann (31.1.1908–21.9.2006) – Wanderer Between Worlds 5. Dr Ilse Rosa Hellman-Noach (08.09.1908–03.12.1998) – ‘From War Babies to Grandmothers’  6. Hansi (Hanna) Kennedy (6.1.1923–30.10.2003) – A Life for the Hampstead Child Therapy Clinic; Anna Freud  – Interweaving Life, Work and Research

 

Biography

Christiane Ludwig-Körner is a psychologist, psychoanalyst, training analyst and supervisor for the IPA. She has taught developmental and clinical psychology at the University of Applied Sciences in Potsdam, and at the International Psychoanalytic University Berlin (IPU), Germany, where she now holds a senior professorship.

'This book presents the long-forgotten work of young women who themselves had escaped the Holocaust and, under the direction of Anna Freud, offered a home to evacuated children and war orphans after World War II - and also found a new home themselves. Written with heart and soul, it is based on numerous interviews, conducted over a period of 20 years, and is an incomparable document that shows how new attachments were formed and enriched the lives of these children and their carers over decades.'

Inge Seiffge-Krenke, PhD, psychoanalyst, Professor for Psychology, Head of the Department of Developmental Psychology at the University of Mainz, Germany

'This erudite book pays tribute to Anna Freud and Dorothy Burlingham’s unique War Nurseries, which could not have functioned without the dedication of many young women who, after narrowly escaped the Holocaust, dedicated themselves to refugee children suffering the same fate. While tracing the lives and work of seven such female employees, Anna Freud’s own vision and subtle understanding is vividly portrayed.'

Professor Joan Raphael-Leff, Leader, Anna Freud Centre’s Academic Faculty for Psychoanalytic Research; Co-editor, The Anna Freud Tradition – Lines of Development. Evolution of Theory and Practice over the Decades, Karnac, 2012