David Pablo Boder Papers, 1938-1957

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David Pablo Boder Papers, 1938-1957

David P. Boder (1886-1961) was a psychology professor at the Lewis Institute (now Illinois Institute of Technology) (1927-52), the trustee and executive director of the Psychological Museum in Chicago (1937-57), and the psychological consultant with the war training program of IIT during World War II. He collected interviews with displaced persons in camps of France, Switzerland, Italy, and Germany and studied victims of the Kansas City Flood (1951). In 1952, Boder became a research associate in psychology at UCLA. The collection consists of correspondence, transcripts, manuscripts and printed items related to Boder's research on displaced persons, and materials related to his tenure as the Director of the Psychological Museum in Chicago.

38 boxes (19.0 linear ft.)

eng,

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SNAC Resource ID: 6650301

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Psychological Museum (Chicago, Ill.)

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Boder, David P. (David Pablo), 1886-1961

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David P. Boder was professor at the National University of Mexico, 1920-1925 and at the Illinois Institute of Technology, 1937-1952. He was staff psychologist at Michael Reese Hospital, 1927-1933. Founder of the Psychological Museum, Chicago, Illinois in 1937. Materials authored by Boder include the Stanford Binet test for Mexico and "I did not interview the dead." From the description of David P. Boder papers, 1927-1956. (University of Akron). WorldCat record id: 59006616 B...