LC control no. | n 82092055 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Hacker, Friedrich, 1914-1989 |
Variant(s) | Hacker, Frederick J., 1914-1989 |
Birth date | 19140119 |
Death date | 19890623 |
Place of birth | Vienna (Austria) |
Place of death | Mainz (Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany) |
Affiliation | University of Southern California Sigmund Freud-Gesellschaft |
Profession or occupation | Psychiatrists Psychoanalysts |
Found in | Bergedorfer Gesprächskreis zu Fragen der Freien Industriellen Gesellschaft. Verstärken oder verringern sich die Bedingungen ... 1969. Email from As, Feb. 28, 2004 (Friedrich Hacker and Frederick J. Hacker are the same person) Crusaders, criminals, crazies, c1976: t.p. (Frederick J. Hacker, M.D.) Österreichische-Lexikon AEIOU online, Mar. 1, 2004 (Hacker, Friedrich; b. Jan. 19, 1914, Vienna, Austria; d. June 23, 1989, Mainz, Germany; Psychiater und Psychoanalytiker; emigrated to Switzerland, 1938; emigrated to the U.S., 1940; Professor in Los Angeles; works: Versagt der Mensch oder die Gesellschaft?, 1964; Aggression, 1971; Terror, 1973; Freiheit, die sie meinen, 1978; Konflikttheorie und Fernsehen, 1980; Drogen. Verhüten statt behandeln, behandeln statt strafen, 1981; Das Faschismus-Syndrom, 1990) World biog. index, Mar. 1, 2004 (Hacker, Frederick J.; b. 1914; Professor für Psychiatrie; source Biographisches Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Emigration nach 1933) Österreichische Soziologinnen und Soziologen im Exil 1933 bis 1945, Mar. 1, 2004 (Friedrich Hacker, siehe Frederick J. Hacker; b. Vienna, Jan. 19, 1914; d. Mainz, June 23, 1989) Contemporary Authors, via WWW, November 3, 2014 (Frederick J. Hacker; 1914-1989; One source spells given name Friedrich; born January 19, 1914, in Vienna, Austria; naturalized U.S. citizen; died of apparent cardiac arrest, June 23, 1989 in Mainz, West Germany; psychiatrist, consultant, educator, and author; Hacker was a renowned psychiatrist who specialized in the psychology of terrorism; known for his research investigating such subjects as juvenile delinquency, mass murder, and aggression, Hacker was called as a consultant in several widely publicized instances of criminal violence: he advised the West German Government after the terrorist attack during the 1972 Olympic Games; he worked with newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst's family after her 1974 kidnapping; and he testified at Charles Manson's trial for the murder of Sharon Tate and several others; educated in Europe, Hacker fled the Nazi threat in his native Austria in the 1930s; he finished his medical degree in Switzerland, came to the United States, and, after additional training at the Menninger Clinic in Kansas, founded the Hacker Psychiatric Clinic in Los Angeles; later, Hacker spent part of each year practicing psychiatry in Vienna, Austria; he began his private practice in the United States in 1958, and he taught at the University of Southern California starting in 1970; Hacker's numerous professional associations included memberships in the American Psychiatric Association and the Sigmund Freud Society, which he founded; Hacker was the author of several books, among them Materials to Aggression, Terror and Terrorism, and the 1977 Crusaders, Criminals, Crazies: Terror and Terrorism in Our Time, for which he was perhaps best known) |
Associated language | eng ger |
Invalid LCCN | no 00051628 |