Marvin Kaufmann Opler was an American anthropologist and social psychiatrist.
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Marvin Kaufmann Opler was an American anthropologist and social psychiatrist.
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Marvin Opler's brother Morris Edward Opler was an anthropologist who studied the Southern Athabaskan peoples of North America.
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Morris and Marvin Opler were the sons of Austrian-born Arthur A Opler, a merchant, and Fanny Coleman-Hass.
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Marvin Opler is best known for his work as a principal investigator in the Midtown Community Mental Health Research Study .
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Marvin Opler attended the University at Buffalo from 1931 to 1934.
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Marvin Opler then transferred to the University of Michigan, attracted by the reputation of the American anthropologist Leslie White.
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Marvin Opler was interested in the relationships between psychology and anthropology, fields which White had considered connected.
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Marvin Opler taught sociology and anthropology as the chair of anthropology at Reed College from 1938 until 1943.
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From 1943 until 1946, Marvin Opler worked as a Community Analyst at the Tule Lake War Relocation Center, where his critical views of the internment of Japanese Americans later led him to co-author Impounded Peoples in 1946.
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Marvin Opler noted the parallels between the revival of traditional Japanese culture among the largely acculturated internees at Tule Lake and the spread of the Ghost Dance religion among Plains Indian tribes in the 19th century.
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Marvin Opler pointed out that both were attempts by the colonized to reassert their dignity.
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Suzuki believes that Marvin Opler's work was a model of the positive role that these anthropologists could have played.
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At Tule Lake, Marvin Opler befriended several well-known Japanese American internees.
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Marvin Opler was impressed by the work of George Tamura, a Japanese American artist who spent his teenage years imprisoned at Tule Lake.
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Marvin Opler co-authored an article on Senryu folk poetry with another internee, F Obayashi, which was published in the Journal of American Folklore in 1945.
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Marvin Opler responded that the only party he had ever been a member of was the Democratic Party, which he had been involved in up until he moved to Tule Lake.
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The FBI discovered that Marvin Opler was held in high regard both by his coworkers at Tule Lake, as well as by the interned Japanese Americans.
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The FBI described Marvin Opler as being "cooperative and courteous" and ended the investigation.
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In 1947, Marvin Opler submitted an affidavit in support of the restoration of citizenship to three American citizens of Japanese ancestry who had renounced their citizenship at Tule Lake.
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Marvin Opler directed the Ethnic Family Operation within the Midtown Study.
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In 1957, Marvin Opler helped found the International Journal of Social Psychiatry.
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In 1958, Marvin Opler went to work for the State University at Buffalo, where he worked for the remainder of his career.
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In December 1935, the same year that he earned his degree from the University of Michigan, Marvin Opler married vocational specialist and student counselor Charlotte Fox, who subsequently became involved in biological research, Japanese-American rights, and environmental activism.
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Ruth Marvin Opler Perry is a professor of literature at MIT, where she studies and teaches English literature, women's writing, and feminist theory.
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Lewis Marvin Opler was a psychiatrist and psychopharmacologist who co-authored the PANSS, a symptom severity rating scale widely used in the study of psychosis.
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Several of Marvin Opler's grandchildren are active in various fields of academia, including Dr Curtis Perry, Dr Mark Opler, and Dr Daniel Opler.
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Marvin Opler's memorial was held in New York, where he was remembered both for his scholarly contributions as well as for his work with the community.
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Marvin Opler's papers are housed in the Columbia University Health Sciences Library Archives [1].
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Marvin Opler was a prolific writer and some of his publications are listed below.
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Marvin Opler contributed to many professional journals and held the following positions:.
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