The Nazi and the Psychiatrist
Page 33
Schizophrenia, Hess’s diagnosis of, 216–217
Schroeder, Christa, 191–192
Schutzstaffel (SS), 3
Science and Sanity: An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics (Korzybski), 33
Science in Action (television program), 189
Security, at Nuremberg prison, 91–92, 125–126
Selzer, Michael, 219–220, 221
Sexual drive, Hitler and, 159
Seyss-Inquart, Artur, 111, 123, 149
Sheppard, Sam, 183
Sheran, Rodney, 186
Shirer, William L., 69– 70
“A Short Talk with Erlanger” (Hersey), 170
Shulman, Ray and Irving, 188
Society of American Magicians, 34
Sodium amytal, 36, 39, 85, 168, 177
Sodium pentothal, 39, 85, 168, 177
Soldiers, psychological injury of, 38–41
Somnoform, 177–178, 186
Sonnemann, Emmy, 58
Soviet Union. See USSR
Spandau Prison, Hess at, 154, 215–217
Spectators, trial, 127
Speer, Albert, 13
desire for cyanide capsule, 43
on Gilbert’s book, 173
lunch seating and, 140
release from prison, 217
sentencing of, 148
Sprecher, Drexel, 107
“Squeal, Nazi, Squeal” (Kelley), 164
SS. See Schutzstaffel (SS)
Stack, Robert I., 3–4
Stage magic
Kelley and, 30, 34–36, 182, 193
Kelley as consultant on, 188
as occupational therapy, 35–36
Stahmer, Otto, 112
Stanford Prison Experiment, 218–219
Stivers, Herbert Lee, 151
Streicher, Julius, 7
anti-Semitism of, 63, 88
death sentence, 149
as defendant, 130
execution of, 153
Gilbert’s Jewishness and, 106
insinuations on Göring’s sexuality and, 58
IQ of, 111
on race relations in US, 134, 163
reaction to images of concentration camps, 135
rehearsal for trial and, 128
relations with fellow prisoners, 63–64, 90, 131
Rorschach test and, 96
Thematic Apperception Test and, 111
transfer to Nuremberg, 44
Sturmabteilung (SA), 11, 76
Suicide
Conti’s, 98
Douglas Kelley’s, 205–211
as embarrassment to Andrus and Americans, 107–108
Goebbels’s, 152
Göring’s, 150–153, 171, 173
Hess’s, 217
Himmler’s, 152
Hitler’s, 115, 152, 160–161
Ley’s, 107
Nazi officials and, 9
precautions to prevent, 9, 107–108
Suicide attempts
Frank’s, 7
Hess’s, 83–84, 85
Ley’s, 64
Sunset View Cemetery, 1
Swearingen, Ben E., 151
Talmadge, Eugene, 163
TAT. See Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Taylor, Telford, 151
Tele-empathy, 201–202
Television, Kelley and, 188–191
Terman, Lewis, 29, 175, 200, 204–205
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
administered to Göring, 97–98
administered to Nazi prisoners, 111
The Stormtrooper (Der Stürmer) (newspaper), 7, 63
Thompson, Lloyd J., 39, 165
“Time-binding,” 33
Time magazine, on Andrus, 7
Totalitarian ideology, Kelley on blocking, 171–172
Translators, Nuremberg, 73–74, 127
Travis Air Force Base, 188
Treaty of Versailles, Nazis and, 11, 114, 133–134
Triest, Howard, 115
Jewishness of, 73–74, 88
Rorschach test administration and, 94
Streicher and, 88
trip to Erlangen/collection of Nazi books, 120–121
Truckee (California), 25, 26, 28, 31, 197, 208
Trujillo, Rafael, 215–216
Truman, Harry, 155–156
Truth serums/truth detection, 36, 39, 85, 168, 177–178, 186
Tusa, Ann, 140
Tusa, John, 140
22 Cells in Nuremberg (Kelley), 165, 172, 174–175, 179, 185, 192, 213–214
United States
evidence of Nazi power techniques in, 163
International Military Tribunal and, 43, 67
race relations in, 134, 142, 163, 164
U.S. Marshal (television program), 214
University of California Berkeley, 165
criminology program at, 178–179, 181, 189
Kelley at, 30, 31
University of California Medical School, 35
University of Florida, 219
USSR
Hess and, 84, 217
International Military Tribunal and, 43, 67
Valdenstein Castle, 5, 59
Vollmer, August, 183
Wake Forest University, 165–166
Waldear, Gordon, 189–190, 214
Walsh, Maurice N., 215–217
War crimes, attempts to understand psychology of, 155
War crimes tribunal. See International Military Tribunal
War Criminals Wing, at Nuremberg, 51
access to, 53–54
Washington Cooperative Book Shop Association, 185
Wechsler-Bellevue Adult IQ tool, 110
West, Rebecca
on Göring, 56, 129
on Schirach, 130
on Streicher, 64
Wheeler, Jack “Tex,” 151
Why, Doctor? (television program), 189
Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel (newspaper), 168
Winston-Salem Police Department, 177
Witnesses, Nuremberg trial, 127
Wood, E. F. L., 121
Workaholics, Nazi leaders as, 158–159
Worth, Jonathan, 168–170
Zillmer, Eric, 222
Zimbardo, Philip, 218–219
Credit: Elizabeth Barnwell
Jack El-Hai is the author of The Lobotomist and is a widely published journalist who covers history, medicine, and science. He has contributed more than five hundred articles to such publications as The Atlantic, Scientific American Mind, Wired, the Washington Post Magazine, and the History Channel Magazine. He is the winner of the June Roth Memorial Award for Medical Journalism, as well as fellowships and grants from the McKnight Foundation, the Jerome Foundation, and the Center for Arts Criticism. A faculty member of the MFA program in creative writing at Augsburg College, he lives in Minneapolis.
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