Canadian by birth, Prosen obtained his initial qualifications from the University of Manitoba in the 1950s, before spending part of his residency at the University of Chicago studying under notable researchers including Heinz Kohut.[3]
Career
For more than 50 years, Prosen was involved in clinical and teaching psychiatry. He was Head of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Manitoba from 1975 to 1987;[4] and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin from 1987 to 2003.[1] He has been on numerous clinical, academic, institutional, government and editorial boards in both Canada and the United States; and been consultant to many hospitals, universities and associations. From 1978 to 1979, he was the President of the Canadian Psychiatric Association.[1]
Empathy and bonobos
His earlier work focused on inter-generational issues in families, focusing particularly on empathy and empathic deficits. Much of this work originated in studying variations of the life-stages of humans, then developing an inter-generational approach to psychiatric treatment.[5] His 1972 paper The Remembered Mother and the Fantasized Mother[6] has been regarded as an influential work. Some of Prosen's early publications focused on non-verbal communication and also variations in facial features under different emotional circumstances. He developed a particular interest in adolescents and psychotherapy.
Prosen's interest in empathy prepared him well for his later work with primates, in particular bonobos, considered to be the most empathetic of all primates.[7] Since 1998, he was psychiatric consultant to the Bonobo Species Preservation Society, assisting primatologists working with one of the largest collections of captive bonobo primates in the world at the Milwaukee County Zoo, studying bonobo culture and development.[8] This work led to Prosen receiving numerous consultations from the United States and other parts of the world concerning psychological and other problems in primates.[9] The rehabilitation of an emotionally disturbed young bonobo named "Brian" generated substantial publicity, including a story in The Atlantic[10][11] as well as appearing in Laurel Braitman's 2014 book Animal Madness.[12]
Prosen also promoted mental health awareness.[13] Later in his career, after becoming aware of Australian biologist Jeremy Griffith’s thesis on the human condition in 2004, he became a noted advocate of Griffith's work, including writing the foreword to Griffith's 2014 book Is It to Be Terminal Alienation or Transformation for the Human Race? (republished in 2016 as Freedom: The End of the Human Condition).[14][15][16]
Prosen, H. (April 1973). "Maternal Deprivation and later Sexual Adjustment". Human Sexuality. 7 (4, 58 and 214).
Prosen, H.; Toews, J.; Martin, R. (1981). Adolescent Psychiatry: The Life Cycle of the Family: Parental Midlife Crisis and Adolescent Rebellion. Vol. IX. Annals of the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry. pp. 170–179.
Prosen, H.; Chan, C. (1991). Medical Examination Review, Psychiatry (9 ed.). New York: Elsevier Science Publishing Company, Inc.
Prosen, H. (April 1973). "Maternal Deprivation and later Sexual Adjustment". Human Sexuality. 7 (4, 58 and 214).
Prosen, H.; Toews, J.; Martin, R. (1981). Adolescent Psychiatry: The Life Cycle of the Family: Parental Midlife Crisis and Adolescent Rebellion. Vol. IX. Annals of the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry. pp. 170–179.
^Prosen, H.; Martin, R.; Prosen, M. (December 1972). "The Remembered Mother and the Fantasized Mother". Archives of General Psychiatry. 27 (6): 791–798. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1972.01750300057009. PMID4637896.
^Sandin, Jo (2007). Bonobos: Encounters in Empathy. Milwaukee: Zoological Society of Milwaukee & The Foundation for Wildlife Conservation, Inc. p. 109. ISBN978-0-9794151-0-4.