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Jean
Baker Miller, MD
1927– 2006
Pioneering Theorist, Teacher, and Therapist
Founding Director
Jean
Baker Miller Training
Institute
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MEDIA
ADVISORY FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 3, 2006
JEAN BAKER MILLER TRAINING INSTITUTE
Wellesley Centers for Women
Contact Linda Hartling, Ph.D., Associate Director: 781-283-2858
Jean Baker Miller,
MD, noted feminist, psychoanalyst, and social activist died
at her Brookline, Massachusetts
home July 29, 2006 after a 13-year struggle with emphysema and
post-polio effects. Her 1976 groundbreaking book, Toward a New
Psychology of Women, traced the connection between women’s
mental health and sociopolitical forces. Dr. Miller maintained
that women’s desire to connect with others and their emotional
accessibility were essential strengths, not weaknesses as they
were traditionally regarded.
She was born September 29, 1927 in The Bronx, New York to Irene
and Henry Baker. She contracted polio at l0 months of age and until
the age of 10 underwent several operations that left her with an
atrophied leg and limp. Her family was of very modest means and
she attended New York City schools. She won a scholarship to Sarah
Lawrence College where near graduation she switched from a history
to a pre-med major. She then had a scholarship at the College of
Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, one of ten women
in a class of l00, graduating in 1952. She was an intern and a
first-year resident in internal medicine at Montefiore Hospital
in the Bronx. Switching to psychiatry, she was a resident at Bellevue
Hospital, Jacobi Hospital, and the Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse.
She held faculty positions at Boston University School of Medicine,
Harvard Medical School, and Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
She was a fellow of the American Psychiatric Association; the American
College of Psychiatrists; the American Orthopsychiatric Association;
and the American Academy of Psychoanalysis.
Toward a New Psychology of Women, a bestseller
and classic in the fields of psychology and
women’s studies, was translated
in over 20 languages and distributed around the world. Dr. Miller
also co-authored The Healing Connection: How Women Form Relationships
in Therapy and in Life and Women’s Growth in Connection;
she edited Psychoanalysis and Women, and authored and contributed
to numerous articles on depression, dreams, and the psychology
of women.
“Toward a New Psychology of Women maps the interplay between empathy and
politics masterfully and for the first time,” says Christina Robb, Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of the new book, This Changes Everything: The Relational
Revolution in Psychology. “In it, Dr. Miller created the first democratic
psychology – that is, the first psychology of people who at last can realistically
hope and learn to work with and love their political equals all their lives.”
Dr. Miller’s writings and work led to her appointment
as the first director of the Stone Center for Developmental
Studies
at Wellesley College in 1981 where she spearheaded collaborative
work among scholars, researchers, and clinicians on the treatment
and prevention of mental health problems in women.
Work at the Stone Center led to the subsequent establishment
of the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute at the Wellesley
Centers
for Women at Wellesley College in 1995. Dr. Miller served as director
of the Institute until late 2005, where Relational-Cultural Theory – a
new model of psychological development – was further elaborated
and taught to practitioners, lay persons, and most recently, business
professionals.
While most of the Institute’s seminars have been geared to
training mental health professionals, the underlying message of
Dr. Miller’s work calls for a basic shift in the way human
relationships are organized. From emphasizing separateness, accruing
power over others, and social stratification, nations and individuals
need to emphasize mutual respect and the building of community.
Her greatest hope was to effect change that would bring about real
social justice.
Judith Jordan, director of the Jean Baker Miller
Training Institute, reflects, “Alongside Jean,
we worked to educate people that human development
is about movement toward increasing mutuality
and better connection, rather than growth toward separateness and
independence. Her vision has altered our core understanding of
both men and women; we all need connection. Building growth-fostering
relationships leads not only to personal wellbeing but to social
justice.”
Dr. Miller traveled the world educating people about
this new paradigm. “Everywhere
we went,” Dr. Jordan notes, “women would come to Jean
after her conference and say these identical words, ‘Your
book changed my life! Thank you!’ Jean, with characteristic
humility, was always surprised.”
In addition to conducting seminars and workshops,
the scholars at the Institute have continued to expand
applications of Dr. Miller’s
work and Relational-Cultural Theory to address a broad-range of
psychological, social, and organizational issues through working
papers. Recent publications co-authored by Dr. Miller include:
Telling the Truth about Power (2003); How Change Happens: Controlling
Images, Mutuality and Power (2002); and Racial Images and Relational
Possibilities (2001).
“Jean Baker Miller was a cherished friend and colleague whose brilliance,
gentle determination, and wide influence brought great honor to Wellesley College,” says
Diana Chapman Walsh, president of Wellesley College. “It was fitting that
the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute took root on the campus of a college
dedicated to educating women to make a difference in the world. Jean’s
groundbreaking work has made an enduring difference to generations of women and
men, enabling us to understand power in connection with compassion and love.”
Susan McGee Bailey, executive director of the Wellesley
Centers for Women, notes, “Jean’s feminism
was strong, compassionate, and unwavering, never
militant but radical in its implications.
Her work and her theory are not just for psychologists nor just
for women, but for all people everywhere. The strength and clarity
of her vision will continue to inspire our work here at the Centers
as well as that of so many around the world who were touched by
her life, her perspectives, and her practice.”
In her last public presentation at the Institute
in a 2004 program called “Encouraging an Era of Connection,” Dr. Miller’s
work focused on creating communities of courage and hope. “I
think that the source of hope lies in believing that one has or
can move toward a sense of connection,” she shared.
Throughout her life, Dr. Miller was known for her humility. Resisting
the notion of individual recognition, she recognized that her work
grew in collaboration with others. Dr. Miller was the reluctant
recipient of numerous awards and honors including, Woman of the
Year in Health and Medicine from the National Organization of Women
Massachusetts Chapter, 1982, and Massachusetts Psychological Association
Allied Professional Award for Outstanding Contributions of the
Advances of Psychology, 1982. She received honorary degrees from
Brandeis University and Regis College. She was featured in Changing
the Face of Medicine: Celebrating American’s Women Physicians,
a traveling exhibit organized by the National Library of Medicine
at the National Institutes of Health, 2003-2007.
Dr. Miller is survived by her husband of more than 50 years, S.M.
(Mike) Miller of Brookline, two sons, Jonathan F. Miller of Sleepy
Hollow, New York and Edward D. Miller of New York City and a grandson,
Jacob (Jake) Miller.
A memorial service will be held in the fall at
Wellesley College. In lieu of flowers, the family
has requested that contributions
be made to the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute in Dr. Miller’s
memory, and sent to: Jean Baker Miller Training Institute, Wellesley
Centers for Women, Wellesley College, 106 Central Street, Wellesley,
MA 02481.
Gifts may also be made online via: Click
here to make a contribution...
All
contributions to the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute
are tax deductible as allowable by law.
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Link
to Additional Articles:
Los Angeles Times
Jean Baker Miller, 78; Challenged Psychological Views of Women
By Elaine Woo, Times Staff Writer
August 4 2006 |