Daniel Oppenheim
A psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, Daniel Oppenheim was head of department at the Institut Gustave Roussy. A specialist in the caregiver–patient relationship and in medical ethics, he devoted himself to the psychological support of cancer patients, particularly children and adolescents. He also reflects on questions of Jewish identity through his contributions to Plurielles.
Articles (18)
- No. 22 Isaac Babel's gaze upon men and the world
- No. 21 Fears and terrors. Their causes and consequences
- No. 20 Building and inhabiting the space of dialogue and hospitality
- No. 20 Talking with adolescents about terrorism
- No. 19 The intellectual's experience of barbarism and the ethics of witnessing according to Jean Améry
- No. 18 Writing to transmit the experience of barbarism and to free oneself from it
- No. 17 Finding oneself again, finding one's place among others after enduring barbarism
- No. 17 Reweaving the bond between the living and the dead: Daniel Mendelsohn's *The Lost*
- No. 16 Lamed Shapiro, from Kishinev 1903 to New York 1930
- No. 15 Being a son, being a father in the Shoah and after
- No. 14 Variations on the border, with Yuri Olesha and George Orwell
- No. 13 The feeling of seeing one's rights unrecognized: the example of the doctor-patient relationship
- No. 12 Between Tradition and Subversion: The Contradiction of the King of the Schnorrers
- No. 12 Literary Excerpts
- No. 11 An ethics of travel. To dream, to leave, to find the Other, to find oneself
- No. 10 Past and present, ideal and reality
- No. 10 *Trois jours et un enfant* (*Three Days and a Child*)
- No. 9 In the aftermath of the event