ABSTRACT

This book is an autobiographical account of George Mandler--born in 1924--who grew up in a middle class Jewish family in Vienna. It details the fears and attempts to find a safe haven when Austria was invaded and absorbed into Nazi Germany in 1938, followed by Mandler's escape to England and residence in a small boarding school. The threat of the holocaust and reaction to anti-semitism are explored and the author describes the life of an emigre youth group run by a branch of the Austrian communist party. Drafted in 1943, Mandler is trained in military intelligence and ends up as a front line interrogator with the 7th army in Germany. The training and function of military intelligence and the role of German and Austrian refugees in it are described for the first time in detail. Military intelligence and counter-intelligence work in post-war Germany follows, including the evacuation of a scientific establishment before the arrival of the Soviets.

Returning to New York in 1946, Mandler begins his college training at New York University and the University of Basel, Switzerland. This is followed by graduate training in psychology at Yale and a first position at Harvard for seven years. Highlights of the period include a short episode of peripheral involvement in a Soviet spy scandal. After five years at the University of Toronto, Mandler is given the opportunity of a lifetime--to start a department at the prestigious new San Diego branch of the University of California. He describes the process of building a department and a university in the context of the 1960s, as well as academic life and actions during the turbulent 60s and 70s. Mandler's successful career as a writer and researcher in psychology is described in lay language, as is the professional/scientific bifurcation of the field. The final chapter comments on and describes current academic life and problems.

chapter 1|36 pages

Growing Up in Vienna 1924–1938

chapter 2|34 pages

Ends and Beginnings 1938–1940

chapter 3|17 pages

Emigre Life in New York 1940–1943

chapter 4|40 pages

My War 1943–1946

chapter 5|15 pages

The Veteran 1946–1949

chapter 7|15 pages

The Trip Through Harvard 1953–1960

chapter 9|31 pages

California Beginnings 1965–1970

chapter 10|35 pages

Settling Down and Retirement 1970–

chapter 11|20 pages

My Psychology—and How I Got There

chapter 12|21 pages

Consolidations and Reflections

chapter |3 pages

Epilogue