Description

Book Synopsis

Chester Pierce's list of accomplishments was second to none: graduate of Harvard University and Harvard Medical School, president of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, president of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, founding national chair of the Black Psychiatrists of America, and namesake of the American Psychiatric Association's Human Rights Award. Moreover, his musings about racism as an environmental pollutant, of the daily microtrauma that racially oppressed individuals endure, are foundational to modern mental health.

But who was the man behind the numerous professional achievements and seminal theories? And what can knowledge of his life, when evaluated in conjunction with his profound impact on psychiatry, reveal about the Black experience?

First published in 1998 and reprinted here with a new introduction, this collection of interactive discussions between Ezra Griffith and Chester Pierce takes readers on a journey through different stages of Pierce's life, including the following:

• His upbringing in the Long Island community of Glen Cove
• His undergraduate years at Harvard, including his athletic pursuits, membership in the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, and early married life with Patsy Blanchet
• His training at the University of Cincinnati and experiences as a Navy psychiatrist
• His time at the Oklahoma Veterans Administration Hospital

What emerges is more than just a portrait of one particularly determined and talented man's path to achievement in the face of individual and institutional obstacles. We find distinct methods of managing the stress of racial discrimination. There is also a new way to approach narratives about Black lives. Anyone interested in gaining a greater understanding of how to evaluate the salience of race matters in people's lives and develop therapeutic approaches to coping with the stress will find this a particularly revelatory resource.



Table of Contents

Preface
Chapter 1. The Beginnings and Glen Cove
Chapter 2. The Harvard Student Years
Chapter 3. The Cincinnati and Navy Years
Chapter 4. The Oklahoma Years
Chapter 5. The Return to Cambridge
Chapter 6. Recent Years and Other Events
Publications by Chester Middlebrook Pierce

Race and Excellence: My Dialogue With Chester

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Ezra E. H. Griffith

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      View other formats and editions of Race and Excellence: My Dialogue With Chester by Ezra E. H. Griffith

      Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
      Publication Date: 12/11/2022
      ISBN13: 9781615374830, 978-1615374830
      ISBN10: 1615374833

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Chester Pierce's list of accomplishments was second to none: graduate of Harvard University and Harvard Medical School, president of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, president of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, founding national chair of the Black Psychiatrists of America, and namesake of the American Psychiatric Association's Human Rights Award. Moreover, his musings about racism as an environmental pollutant, of the daily microtrauma that racially oppressed individuals endure, are foundational to modern mental health.

      But who was the man behind the numerous professional achievements and seminal theories? And what can knowledge of his life, when evaluated in conjunction with his profound impact on psychiatry, reveal about the Black experience?

      First published in 1998 and reprinted here with a new introduction, this collection of interactive discussions between Ezra Griffith and Chester Pierce takes readers on a journey through different stages of Pierce's life, including the following:

      • His upbringing in the Long Island community of Glen Cove
      • His undergraduate years at Harvard, including his athletic pursuits, membership in the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, and early married life with Patsy Blanchet
      • His training at the University of Cincinnati and experiences as a Navy psychiatrist
      • His time at the Oklahoma Veterans Administration Hospital

      What emerges is more than just a portrait of one particularly determined and talented man's path to achievement in the face of individual and institutional obstacles. We find distinct methods of managing the stress of racial discrimination. There is also a new way to approach narratives about Black lives. Anyone interested in gaining a greater understanding of how to evaluate the salience of race matters in people's lives and develop therapeutic approaches to coping with the stress will find this a particularly revelatory resource.



      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Chapter 1. The Beginnings and Glen Cove
      Chapter 2. The Harvard Student Years
      Chapter 3. The Cincinnati and Navy Years
      Chapter 4. The Oklahoma Years
      Chapter 5. The Return to Cambridge
      Chapter 6. Recent Years and Other Events
      Publications by Chester Middlebrook Pierce

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