François Tosquelles


Francesc Tosquelles Llauradó, also known as François Tosquelles during his time in France, was a Catalan psychiatrist.

Life

Francesc Tosquelles Llauradó was born into a progressive middle class family in Reus, in 1912. He studied medicine in Barcelona, where during the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera he and a handful of students stormed the premises of the right-wing Patriotic Union on La Rambla. Tosquelles' uncle, the physician and philanthropist Francesc Llauradó, had translated and studied Sigmund Freud's The Interpretation of Dreams, inspiring him to take up psychiatry. Tosquelles trained with psychiatrist, went to work at the Institut Pere Mata, and contributed to the medical publication . He was a Catalan nationalist and was affiliated with the Workers and Peasants' Bloc and its successor, the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification.
After the Spanish coup of July 1936, Tosquelles went to the Aragon front, where he assisted combatants suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. In the first months of the war, he and other POUM militants collectivised two farmhouses on the road from Reus to Salou, where they developed the "bases of child and youth psychotherapy" and established premises for teaching in the schools of Reus.
With the Nationalist victory in the Spanish Civil War in early 1939, he crossed the France–Spain border and spent three months in the Sètfonts internment camp, where he created a psychiatric unit. In 1940, he worked at a psychiatric hospital in Sent Auban, an impoverished area of France that served as a hiding place for surrealist artists and thinkers during the Nazi occupation of France. He also contributed to the birth of art brut: the hospital's patients created sculptures and objects from the materials they had at hand, and some of the pieces are now part of museum collections.
From 1952 on, he hired the anti-colonialist thinker Frantz Fanon as a resident doctor, whom he gave a medical and political education, and with whom he shared a desire to defend minority languages and cultures. His initial impression of Fanon was a negative one, largely because Fanon had studied at the University of Lyon, whose approach to psychiatry Tosquelles opposed. However, he eventually came to recognize admire Fanon's anti-establishment attitude. Together, Tosquelles and Fanon wrote a series of research papers that delivered a positive assessment of Lucio Bini's method of electroconvulsive therapy.
Together with, Tosquelles founded the school of institutional psychotherapy, a movement which later gave rise to anti-psychiatry. He also chaired seminars on the history of psychoanalysis in the Catalan countries in Perpinyà. In the late 1960s he was appointed the director of the Institut Pere Mata. He led the institute until his death in Granjas d'Òut in 1994.

Selected works

De la personne au groupe: A propos des équipes de soin, 1995. Eres..Éducation et psychothérapie institutionnelle, 1984. Matrice Éditions..Hygiène mentale des éducateurs et leur efficacité, 1962. Éditions Hermann..