Alice Miller

Alice Miller was a renowned Polish-Swiss psychologist, psychoanalyst, and philosopher of Jewish origin. She gained international fame for her profound insights into parental child abuse and its long-lasting impacts. Her groundbreaking work, The Drama of the Gifted Child, published in 1981, became a sensation and established her as a significant public intellectual.


Born in Piotrków Trybunalski, Poland, Miller lived through the harrowing experiences of the Nazi occupation, which profoundly influenced her later work. After the war, she relocated to Switzerland, where she pursued her academic interests, eventually earning a doctorate in philosophy, psychology, and sociology from the University of Basel in 1953.


In 1986, Alice Miller was awarded the prestigious Janusz Korczak Prize by the Anti-Defamation League for her contributions to understanding the societal and individual effects of child maltreatment.


Throughout her career, Miller was critical of traditional psychoanalysis, arguing that it often mirrored the oppressive practices it sought to address. Her writings have been translated into multiple languages, spreading her influential ideas worldwide.

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