Arminda Aberastury

Arminda Aberastury (1910–1972), known as La Negra, was an early Argentinian psychoanalyst.[1]

Arminda Aberastury

She was born in Buenos Aires. Through her brother Frederico, who suffered from mental illness, she came to meet Enrique Pichon-Rivière, and married him in 1937. She joined a local, mostly European group interested in psychoanalysis.[1]

Receiving a training analysis from Ángel Garma, one of the group, Arberastury then developed the analysis of children in the style of Melanie Klein and Sophie Morgenstern. She led a seminar on the area, 1948 to 1952, for the Argentinian Psychoanalytic Association. She committed suicide in 1972, having been afflicted with a disfiguring skin disease.[1]

Notes

  1. Roudinesco, Élisabeth; Plon, Michel (2011). Dictionnaire de la Psychanalyse (in French) (4 ed.). Librairie Arthème Fayard. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9782253088547.
gollark: I mean, you couldn't parallelize that.
gollark: Maybe. That's a different thing. I don't know if they would have an option to directly submit things to hash, and it would be slow.
gollark: It's not a significant difference, you can have a good RNG with just a bunch of XORs and bitshifts.
gollark: Otherwise lots would work on the same problem which would be inefficient.
gollark: No, they'd probably pick a random value and increment it.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.