Frances Heussenstamm

France Kovacs Heussenstamm PhD (November 6, 1928 – March 6, 2019) was an American artist and psychologist. She was a professor of art and education at Columbia University, an associate professor at California State University, Los Angeles, and instructor at Sierra High School, Whittier, California. In sociology research, her experiment entitled, Bumper Stickers and the Cops, is widely referenced, as its findings continue to remain of controversy.

Frances Kovacs Heussenstamm
Born(1928-11-06)November 6, 1928
Cleveland, Ohio
DiedMarch 6, 2019(2019-03-06) (aged 90)
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materPhD, University of Southern California
Spouse(s)Karl Heussenstamm
ChildrenPaul Heussenstamm

Mark Heussenstamm

John Heussenstamm
Scientific career
FieldsSociology, psychology

Life and education

Heussenstamm was born in Cleveland to Fred Kovacs and Edna Jacqueline Reiter. She has two siblings, a younger sister, Marcia Kovacs and her brother, Jerry Kovacs, an engineer. She earned her Bachelor's at Whittier College in 1957, followed by her Master of Arts at Whittier College in 1960. She achieved a Doctor of Philosophy, from University of Southern California in 1968.

Heussenstamm, and her husband, Karl Heussenstamm bore three sons, Paul Heussenstamm, Mark Heussenstamm and John Heussenstamm.

Later in life, she struggled with brain injury from a car accident.[1] At the age of 78, she continued to educate and lecture aboard more than 30 international cruises.[2] She also completed twenty two large canvas paintings series entitled, The Circle.[3]

Career and contributions

Heussenstamm earned a PhD in sociology from University of Southern California at a time when this was a rarity for women. She was also a clinical psychologist and intensive journal instructor.[4]

In 1969, Heussenstamm conducted an experiment, Bumper Stickers and the Cops.[5] The experiment concluded that police officers give citations often with their own interests, as students with perfectly good driving records began receiving tickets because of newly placed Black Panther bumper stickers.[6][7]

Books

  • Heussenstamm, Frances (1993) Blame It on Freud: A Guide to the Language of Psychology[8]
  • Heussenstamm, Frances (2013) Blurts! Talk about Brain Injury
  • Heussenstamm, Frances (2018) Cruising Granny
gollark: Facts are a *great* way to understand the underlying physical reality of things.
gollark: It might be true in some ridiculously broadly defined sense, but it then loses any actual utility.
gollark: Sure I do. Your abstract thinking is just bad. Some offense.
gollark: Some systems will conveniently go back to an equilibrium regardless of how hard you poke them. Some will not, and might just vary wildly or get stuck in one state or whatever.
gollark: That isn't actually true except in specific technical contexts.

References

  1. "Blurts about brain injury".
  2. "Cruising Granny".
  3. "The Circle". paintology.org.
  4. "Obituary". The Indy.
  5. Heussenstamm, F. K. (February 1, 1971). "Bumper stickers and the cops". Trans-action. 8 (4): 32–33. doi:10.1007/BF02804118. ISSN 1936-4725.
  6. "Human Behavior Experiments Black Panthers and the Police". trivia-library.com.
  7. "Module 1: Foundations of Sociology Search for: Reading: Experiments". Lumen Sociology.
  8. Timberlake, Elizabeth M. (September 1995). "Review". Social Work. 40 (5).
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