Muriel Gardiner Buttinger was an American psychoanalyst and psychiatrist.
Background
Gardiner was born on November 23, 1901 in Chicago, the daughter of Edward Morris, president of the Morris & Company meat-packing business, and Helen (née Swift) Morris, a member of the family which owned Swift & Company, another meat-packing firm. She was born into a family of wealth and privilege.
Education
She attended the University of Oxford and then, in 1926, went to Vienna, hoping to study psycho-analysis and be analyzed by Sigmund Freud.
Career
After graduating from Wellesley College in 1922 she traveled to Europe where she lived until the outbreak of World World War World War II In 1934, she became involved in anti-Fascist activities. Using the code name Mary, she smuggled passports and money and offered her home as a safe house for anti-Fascist dissidents, activities which she described in her memoir Code Name Mary: Memoirs of an American Woman in the Austrian Underground (1983). Gardiner edited The Wolf-Manitoba by the Wolf-Manitoba, which documents the case history of a wealthy young Russian who went to Vienna in 1910 to be analyzed by Freud and who became the subject of Freud"s History of an Infantile Neurosis.
Gardiner met Freud only once, but she knew the Wolf-Manitoba in Vienna, and Code Name Mary carries a foreword by Freud"s daughter, Anna Freud.
In 1976, she authored a study of teenage violence called The Deadly Innocents. Between 1965 and 1984, Gardiner gave a total of 585 acres (237 km2) to the Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association, including Brookdale Farm and two other properties.
In 1983, Gardiner became entangled in the controversy between Mary McCarthy and Lillian Hellman, when she claimed that she was the character called Julia in Hellman"s memoirs, Pentimento (1973), and in the movie Julia based on a chapter of that book Hellman, who never met Gardiner, claimed that her "Julia" was somebody else.
In Gardiner"s account, Schwabacher had visited Gardiner in Vienna and, after Muriel Gardiner and Joseph Buttinger moved into their house at Brookdale Farm in Pennington, New Jersey, in 1940, the house was divided in two with the Gardiner-Buttingers living in one half and Wolf and Ethel Schwabacher in the other for more than ten years.
Most people believed that Hellmann based her story on Gardiner"s life. Gardiner"s editor cited the unlikelihood that there were two millionaire American women who were medical students in Vienna in the late 1930s. Muriel Gardiner died of cancer on February 6, 1985 in Princeton, New Jersey, aged 83.
Muriel-Gardiner-Buttinger-Platz in Vienna is named in her honour.
The Western New England Psychoanalytic Society in New Haven, Connecticut, runs a series of monthly meetings called the Muriel Gardiner Program in Psychoanalysis and the Humanities.