E. Graham Howe
Eric Graham Howe (3 February 1897 – 8 June 1975) was a British psychiatrist notable for his early, interdisciplinary approach to
psychotherapy in the 1930s, featuring elements of
psychodynamic psychology,
existential phenomenology,
Eastern philosophy and
Christian spirituality. After serving in
World War I, he became interested in
Sigmund Freud and decided to study
psychiatry. Following medical school, he worked at the
Tavistock Clinic in the 1920s and 1930s, and established the Open Way Clinic in the 1950s, later renamed the Langham Clinic. Towards the end of his life, he was known as a practicing
Druid. He was the author of more than a dozen books and was influential among a number of writers and psychiatrists, including
Israel Regardie,
Jean Lucey Pratt,
Alan Watts,
Henry Miller, and
R.D. Laing.
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