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  1. Jahoda contribuyó al análisis de los Estudios sobre el prejuicio y fue coeditora del tercer volumen de estos estudios llamado Antisemitismo y trastorno emocional: una interpretación psicológica, publicada en 1950. Entre 1958 y 1965 participó en el establecimiento de programas de grado en Psicología en lo que hoy es la Universidad Brunel.

    • 26 de enero de 1907, Vienna, Austria
    • Austro-Británica
    • 28 de abril de 2001, Sussex, Inglaterra
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Marie_JahodaMarie Jahoda - Wikipedia

    She contributed significantly to the analysis of the Studies on Prejudice and was co-editor of the third volume of these studies called Anti-Semitism and Emotional Disorder: a Psychological Interpretation, which was published in 1950.

  3. This concept was proposed by Jahoda in 1950 and consisted of six portions, including feelings directed towards self, integration, autonomy, grasp on reality, awareness of environment, and growth. This was impactful because it explored psychology not just in the presence of abnormality.

  4. www.wikiwand.com › es › Marie_JahodaMarie Jahoda - Wikiwand

    psicóloga británica / De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. Marie Jahoda (26 de enero de 1907 - 28 de abril de 2001) fue una psicóloga social austro británica. Hizo numerosas contribuciones a la investigación cualitativa y a la sicología social.

  5. Marie Jahoda was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1907 to an upper-middle-class, secular Jewish family. Jahoda’s parents were active Social Democrats and Jahoda became a leader in the Austrian socialist youth movement. Her upbringing was intensely political, and her political activities and convictions had a major impact on the course of her ...

  6. Marie Jahoda | Pursuit of Happiness. “…the absence of mental illness is not a sufficient indicator of mental health.” (1958, p. 15). With these words the Austrian psychologist Marie Jahoda (1907-2001) formulated the basic premise of what has come to be known as “ positive psychology .”

  7. After the end of World War II, Jahoda emigrated to the United States—partly to be reunited with her daughter, who had spent the war years there. In the years between 1945 and 1958 (when she returned to England), Jahoda became one of the best-known social psychologists in the United States.