Amia Lieblich

Amia Lieblich (Hebrew: עמיה ליבליך; born 1939) is an Israeli psychologist and writer known for her work in qualitative research in psychology.[1]

Academic career

Lieblich is professor emeritus from Hebrew University, where she has also served as dean of students. Since her retirement from Hebrew University she is a faculty member at the Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yafo.

Lieblich's research focuses on various aspects of Israeli society including military service, the Kibbutz movement, life stories of women, and the "new family" in Israel.[2] She has also co-edited, with Ruthellen Josselson and Dan P. McAdams, the eleven-book series "The Narrative Study of Lives."

Published works (English)

  • Tin Soldiers on Jerusalem Beach (Pantheon, 1978)
  • Kibbutz Makom (Pantheon, 1981)
  • Transition to Adulthood During Military Service (SUNY Press, 1989)
  • Seasons of Captivity: the Inner World of POWs (NYU Press, 1994)
  • Conversations with Dvora: An Experimental Biography of the First Modern Hebrew Woman Writer (UC Press, 1997)
  • Narrative Research: Reading, Analysis, and Interpretation (With Rivka Tuval-Mashiach and Tamar Zilber, Sage, 1998)
  • Learning about Lea (Athena, 2003)
  • In spite of everything: the story of a bi-national community (2014)
gollark: Madness.
gollark: We can only hope.
gollark: It's an attempt to wrest prizes from those who aren't stupidly rich.
gollark: ```Hoop Snake can fly and crawl fine, but he would much rather move by grasping his tail in his jaws and rolling around like a wheel. He looks extremely silly but can also move terrifyingly fast, but that is only because he manipulates time so viewers think he's wheeling faster and more gracefully than he really is. He's really a strange dragon with a head full of tall tales. His greatest adversaries are trees, which he tends to clumsily impale while rolling around the forest.```
gollark: https://dragcave.net/view/75cUc

References

  1. Jewish Women's Archive. "Amia Lieblich." (January 23, 2010)
  2. Golan, A: "Life, and Nothing But". Haaretz, 2008
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