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Rising to the Light: A Portrait of Bruno Bettelheim [Hardcover]

Theron Raines (Author)
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 20, 2002
In 1983, after years of trying to persuade Bruno Bettelheim to write his autobiography, Theron Raines, his friend and literary agent, himself undertook to tell the life of the renowned but often controversial child psychologist. With no thought of writing a conventional biography, Raines began a series of interviews in which Bettelheim reflected at length upon the major moments—triumphs, crises, and tragedies—of his extraordinary life. Rising to the Light is the fascinating synthesis of these encounters and of Raines’s interviews with counselors, teachers, and former students from the world-famous Orthogenic School.

Here is Bettelheim’s sudden passage from a life of wealth and luxury in Vienna to the appalling brutality of Dachau and Buchenwald, where his intellect helped him survive the horrific conditions that often broke down a prisoner’s personality. His understanding of the parallels between the extreme situation of a concentration-camp prisoner and the inner world of a disturbed child would shape him as a therapist. Here is his voyage from the Old World to the New, and his professional ascent in Chicago, where he developed a total therapeutic milieu for children unable to survive emotionally at home or in any other school. Though he had no specialized training, he was uniquely qualified by his uncanny insights into children and his deep Freudian and post-Freudian convictions about human nature and behavior. Based on his success as a clinician and teacher, he would go on to become a best-selling author. But toward the end of a long life, Bettelheim would succumb to a stroke and to a devastating depression intensified by his feelings of uselessness when he was no longer able to do the work that had been his daily salvation for so many decades. Raines, who visited him twice in his last weeks, also gives us the days just before the puzzling suicide of this man who had endured and built so much.

Despite his demonstrably tireless commitment to children, Bettelheim’s reputation was blemished after his death by attacks on his writings and his unorthodox clinical methods, in particular his use of physical discipline in the psychotherapeutic setting. Raines’s conversations with Bettelheim have much to tell us about this bitterly disputed aspect of his legacy, and they reveal a complex man who had to explore the boundary between compassion and brutality.

Rising to the Light is a portrait of a great teacher; it gives us a more direct line of sight into the Bettelheim enigma than any other book is likely to provide.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Attempting to counteract all the attacks and exposes of Bettelheim that have appeared since his suicide in 1990, this warm biography by his longtime friend and literary agent tries to restore the controversial psychologist's celebratory status as therapist, writer, and teacher. The focus is on Bettelheim's many years as principal of the residential Orthogenic School for troubled children in Chicago. Yes, he did slap the kids, rant at the teachers, and blame the parents, but the autocratic therapy worked, says Raines, whose open, informal account draws on extensive taped personal interviews with Bettelheim in 1983, as well as on conversations with many former students and co-workers. Most interesting is the discussion of Bettelheim's life before he came to the U.S. in 1939, especially his Holocaust survivor experience: how he went from privileged Austrian citizen to inmate of Dachau and Buchenwald, and how that affected his view of the inhumanity and vulnerability of ordinary people. Whether it's his argument with Anne Frank's upbeat message or his claim that childhood autism is the mother's fault, this is sure to continue the passionate debate. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

From the Inside Flap

In 1983, after years of trying to persuade Bruno Bettelheim to write his autobiography, Theron Raines, his friend and literary agent, himself undertook to tell the life of the renowned but often controversial child psychologist. With no thought of writing a conventional biography, Raines began a series of interviews in which Bettelheim reflected at length upon the major moments?triumphs, crises, and tragedies?of his extraordinary life. Rising to the Light is the fascinating synthesis of these encounters and of Raines?s interviews with counselors, teachers, and former students from the world-famous Orthogenic School.

Here is Bettelheim?s sudden passage from a life of wealth and luxury in Vienna to the appalling brutality of Dachau and Buchenwald, where his intellect helped him survive the horrific conditions that often broke down a prisoner?s personality. His understanding of the parallels between the extreme situation of a concentration-camp prisoner and the inner world of a disturbed child would shape him as a therapist. Here is his voyage from the Old World to the New, and his professional ascent in Chicago, where he developed a total therapeutic milieu for children unable to survive emotionally at home or in any other school. Though he had no specialized training, he was uniquely qualified by his uncanny insights into children and his deep Freudian and post-Freudian convictions about human nature and behavior. Based on his success as a clinician and teacher, he would go on to become a best-selling author. But toward the end of a long life, Bettelheim would succumb to a stroke and to a devastating depression intensified by his feelings of uselessness when he was no longer able to do the work that had been his daily salvation for so many decades. Raines, who visited him twice in his last weeks, also gives us the days just before the puzzling suicide of this man who had endured and built so much.

Despite his demonstrably tireless commitment to children, Bettelheim?s reputation was blemished after his death by attacks on his writings and his unorthodox clinical methods, in particular his use of physical discipline in the psychotherapeutic setting. Raines?s conversations with Bettelheim have much to tell us about this bitterly disputed aspect of his legacy, and they reveal a complex man who had to explore the boundary between compassion and brutality.

Rising to the Light is a portrait of a great teacher; it gives us a more direct line of sight into the Bettelheim enigma than any other book is likely to provide.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 544 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1 edition (August 20, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679401962
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679401964
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 4.8 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,563,490 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Misguided attempt to defend the indefensible, October 22, 2007
By 
Fíal (Paris, France) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rising to the Light: A Portrait of Bruno Bettelheim (Hardcover)
That Theron Raines was Bettelheim's friend and literary agent makes one understand that this will not be a critical biography. And Raines is an elderly man who cannot be expected to overturn his longheld beliefs. But I was still deeply shocked and offended that Raines scarcely addressed the major issue of Bettelheim's life.

Bettelheim's entire career was based on his "expertise" in autism. But in fact, Bettelheim lied all the way through his career about his experience and his results. His "success" with autistic children blew away like dust the second anyone from the outside world took a good hard look at it. His Refrigerator Mother theory of autism has harmed and is still harming countless families around the globe-- because even though scientifically discredited, Bettelheim's writings were so widely promoted that they are still in print around the world. Mothers in France are still being told today, in 2007! that they caused their child's autism-- why? because the brilliant Dr. Bettelheim said so. But Raines never mentions the harm Bettelheim did and is still doing. It looks like deliberate blindness.

Raines mentions autism only a few times in the book and obviously knows nothing whatever about it; he even calls people with autism "autists"-- that says it all. His feeble attempt at defending Bettelheim's lack of happy results at the Orthogenic School amounts to quoting Karen Zelan, a psychoanalyst who worked with Bettelheim there and who still believes mothers cause autism, as saying that providing any kind of follow-up results would go against Bettelheim's therapy for the children. (How convenient.) But then Freudian thinking cannot be disproven, as it is faith-based.

For a true look at Bettelheim, read Richard Pollak's thoroughly well-researched book instead.

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9 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Does this man, Theron Raines, have any sense?, August 8, 2004
This review is from: Rising to the Light: A Portrait of Bruno Bettelheim (Hardcover)
As a former student of the O.S., I feel entitled to interrupt Raines' eulogizing about Bettelheim with a few questions:
1) Why is it so easy for this Raines guy to downplay, whitewash, sugarcoat etc., the repeated beating of emotionally disturbed children and teens? I mean if he was being beaten by Bettelheim in the name of a very distorted theory (namely that beating and shaming children will help them overcome their fear of inner aggression), would he so easily rationalize that abuse was good for him?

2) Why is this guy so impressed by how beautiful the Orthogenic School looks? Why does this prove that Bettelheim has the best interests of children at heart? I sure didn't care about fine china or pretty tiles while someone was repeatedly pounding on my body to get me to eat...and by the way depriving me of seeing anyone privately in sessions for the first 4 years of my stay there.

I think Theron Raines needs a course in how to relate compassionately to children.

Also, I want to offer an alternative explanation for why Bettelheim created the Orthogenic School. Raines includes Bettelheim's explanation at face value. First a look at Bettelheim's explanation. Bettelheim says he based his idea for the O.S. on his stay in a Nazi concentration camp. When Bettelheim saw how this sadistic milieu so completely destroyed personalities of sane people, he realized that he could rebuild destroyed personalities by creating a nurturing, understanding milieu. Well, this explanation sounds so nice at face value. However my sense of the underlying truth is that Bettelheim hid his deeper motives possibly from himself and certainly from others. He actually created an environment with certain rather horrific similarities to the concentration camps. Of course, not nearly as horrific. But, remember, the population that came to the O.S. already had weakened or damaged or destroyed personalities, plus they were children...so the Orthogenic School's cruel, sadistic side didn't have to be so blatant to wreak havoc on these emotionally fragile people. I think Bettelheim was enraged when he saw weakness or vulnerability in children. In fact, I think he was drawn to autistic children because he admired how disconnected they were from their feelings. But, for those children who actually still showed some vulnerability, well they got the smacks and the whacks and the beltings and the nasty cracks. I think Bettleheim created the O.S. as an outlet for his own rage at being made to feel powerless and abused at the camps. He used his brilliance to hide his true intentions. And I guess for many reasons, no one ever said boo to him about his thirty years of abusing children. Maybe some staff just assumed he must be right because the University of Chicago supported his work. Maybe some staff were too intimidated by him to question what he said or to report his terrible abuse of children. Maybe some staff got off on being cruel to children themselves. Maybe some staff were dumb.

Now, Raines tries to prop up his idealized picture of Bettelheim with reports of children with "Good Leavings". And he focuses on one "success story" in particular. But, from reading this "success story's" own version of events (in a book entitled The Thing I Was), it appears that one of the MOST successful graduates was practically overcome with ambivalence about what Bettelheim did to him. Even this person describes Bettelheim as capable of terrible physical cruelty and shaming. And even this person clarifies that the main reason he was able to feel better about himself was because of a compassionate counselor who did her best to protect him from Bettelheim.

But, somehow, in Theron Raines' heart of hearts, the abuse seems to mean nothing to him. He doesn't seem to care about all the children who suffered terribly during Bettelheim's reign. So, please read this book with a grain of salt.
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3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A lucid, informative biography, August 8, 2004
This review is from: Rising to the Light: A Portrait of Bruno Bettelheim (Hardcover)
After all the angry attacks that followed Bettelheim's death and after the unmerited smearing of his reputation as a thinker, it is a relief to read his balanced biography. Raines wrote book worthy of its subject, a book that does justice to Bettelheim as an educator and therapist. The book does not delve into many details of Bettelheim's private life and because of that is very cogent. On the other hand, none of the important events are omitted, none of the difficulties and contradictions glossed over. The portrait that emerges is of a man who, like Maria Montessori and Janusz Korczak, transformed his own personal tragedy into a life-restituting effort for those who are most vulnerable: children. A most helpful book to read for anyone who would like to understand Bettelheim's attitude to children is "A Good Enough Parent."
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IN 1980 my wife and I were having dinner at the apartment of a prominent analyst, and in the course of conversation he said, "I want you to hear something by your friend Bruno." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
prisoner elite, informed heart, autistic girl, symbolic wounds, milieu therapy, new counselor
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Orthogenic School, New York, Ruth Marquis, Hyde Park, Margaret Carey, Anne Frank, Hans Willig, San Francisco, Anna Freud, University of Chicago, Ruth Soffer, Karen Zelan, The Informed Heart, United States, Peter Weinmann, The Uses of Enchantment, Bert Cohler, Bruno Bettelheim, Editha Sterba, Emmy Sylvester, Good Enough Parent, Mary Jean, Ralph Tyler, Social Democrats, University of Vienna
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