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His interest in group dynamics extended into his work with disturbed children, where he developed the concept of the Life Space
Interview, as a means of crisis intervention in the life of the troubled child. To help disturbed troubled youth, he suggested the importance of creating a life space that
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Redl's dual focus on the education and socialization of children, and on psychoanalytic models of understanding personality development and of the treatment of children, helped specialize his work throughout his career.
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While in Vienna he met Gina
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His first two publications (1933–34, in German) — on learning difficulties and exam phobias — were followed by an influential article on "Group
Formation and Leadership" published in
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Fritz Redl was born in Klaus, Austria. He witnessed his mother burn to death due to an accident in the kitchen when he was a small child. Redl spent most of his childhood and youth in
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would nurture and inspire positive relationships. He proposed that this be done by structured, engaging activities and by the use of language. Redl also explored the role of
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in promoting regression in children, and how close attention to the child's milieu could help enhance behavioral control. His work with groups,
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to participate in a project about adolescence. While in New York he met George
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Kinder, die hassen, und
Psychoanalytiker, die erziehen: zu Leben und Werk Fritz Redls (1902-1988)
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Following his Wayne State years he moved to
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in 1942. There he explored the role of what he called the "central person" in
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In 1936 he moved to the United States where he was invited by the
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