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Brian Schiff

Professor

  • Department: Psychology, Health and Gender
  • Office: 
    Q-707
  • Office Hours: 
    Tuesdays 14:00–15:00 or by appointment

Brian Schiff is the Esmond Nissim Professor of Psychology, and Director of the George and Irina Schaeffer Center for the Study of Genocide, Human Rights, and Conflict Prevention. Schiff completed his Ph.D. at The University of Chicago, The Committee on Human Development, in 1997 and joined The American University of Paris in 2007. ÌýÌý

Schiff is author ofÌýA New Narrative for Psychology (Oxford University Press, 2017) and co-edited Life and Narrative: The Risks and Responsibilities of Storying Experience (Oxford University Press, 2017). He is also editor of a special issue ofÌýNew Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, Rereading Personal Narrative and Life Course (Jossey-Bass, 2014), and Situating Qualitative Methods in Psychological ScienceÌý(Routledge, 2018). He is the 2016 recipient of the Theodore Sarbin Award from the American Psychological Association's Division 24 (Society for Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology).

Schiff’s current research examines the motivations of perpetrators of mass crimes, the concept of collective memory, and the social impact of atrocity education.ÌýÌý



Education/Degrees

  • PhD in Psychology: Human Development (1997).ÌýDissertation title: Telling survival and the Holocaust.ÌýChair: Bertram Cohler. The Committee on Human Development. The University of Chicago. Chicago, Illinois
  • MA in the Social Sciences (1995),ÌýThe University of Chicago. Chicago, Illinois

Publications

  • Schiff, B. (In preparation). Meaningful violence: Narrative, the great replacement, and morals.
  • Schiff, B. (2023). Are small stories another category of narrating? In A. Georgakopoulou, K. Giaxoglou, & S. Patron (Eds.) Small stories research: Tales, tellings, and tellers across contexts. New York: Routledge.
  • Schiff, B., Altimore, K., & Bougher, G. (2023). The hermeneutics of darkness: Understanding perpetrators on their crimes. In H. Meretoja & M. Freeman (Eds.) The use and abuse of stories: New directions in narrative hermeneutics (pp. 224-243). New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Schiff, B. (2023). Memory is an interpretive action. Narrative Inquiry
  • Schiff, B. (2023). Imagining an alternate psychology. In J. Mildorf, E. Punzi, & C. Singer (Eds.) Narratives and mental health: Bridging theÌýcultural and the individual (pp. 15-31). New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Schiff, B. & Justice, M. (2023). A manifesto on the hermeneutics of violence. In C. Falke, V. Fareld, & H. Meretoja (Eds.) Interpreting violence: Narrative, ethics and hermeneutics (pp. 89-103). New York: Routledge.
  • Schiff, B. (2020).ÌýLa taille importe-t-elleÌývraiment?ÌýIn S. Patron (Ed.)ÌýSmallÌýStories:ÌýUn nouveau paradigme pour les recherches sur le récitÌý(pp. 55-68).ÌýParis: Hermann.ÌýÌý
  • Schiff, B. (Ed.) (2018).ÌýSituating qualitative methods in psychological science.ÌýRoutledge: New York.ÌýÌý

  • Schiff, B. (2018). Introduction: Situating qualitative methods in psychological science. In B. Schiff (Ed.).ÌýSituating qualitative methods in psychological scienceÌý(pp. 1-10). Routledge: New York.ÌýÌý

  • Schiff, B. (2018). Understanding psychology, differently. In B. Schiff (Ed.).ÌýSituating qualitative methods in psychological scienceÌý(pp. 85-99). Routledge: New York.ÌýÌý

  • Schiff, B. (2018). Narrating as political action. In C. J. Hewer & E. Lyons (Eds.)ÌýHandbook of political psychologyÌý(pp. 114-133). Oxford: BPS Wiley.Ìý

  • Schiff, B. (2017).ÌýA new narrative for psychology. New York: Oxford University Press.Ìý
  • Schiff, B., McKim, E. & Patron, S. (Eds.) (2017).ÌýLife and narrative: The risks and responsibilities of storying experience. New York: Oxford University Press.ÌýÌý
  • Schiff, B. (2017). Psychology's silent crisis. OUP Blog, Oxford University Press.
  • Schiff, B., Patron, S. & McKim, E. (Eds., In preparation). Life and narrative: The risks and responsibilities of storying experience. Contract from Oxford University Press. Ìý
  • Schiff, B. (In preparation). A new narrative for psychology. Contract from Oxford University Press
  • Schiff, B. (Ed.) (2014) Re-reading personal narrative and life course. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 145.
  • Schiff, B. (2014). Introduction: Development’s story in time and place. In B. Schiff (Ed.) Re-reading personal narrative and life course. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 145, 1-13.Ìý
  • Schiff, B. (2013). Fractured narratives: Psychology’s fragmented narrative psychology. M. Hyvärinen, M., Hatavara & L. C. Hydén, L.C. (Eds.), The travelling concept of narrative.
  • Schiff, B. (2012). The function of narrative: Toward a narrative psychology of meaning. Narrative Works: Issues, Investigations & Interventions. 2(1), 34-47.
  • Schiff, B., Toulemonde, M. & Porto, C. (2012). Identity in the first person plural: Muslim-Jewish couples in France. In R. Josselson & M. Haraway (Eds.). Navigating multiple identities: Race, gender, culture, nationality, and roles (pp. 167-186). New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Schiff, B., Porto, C. & Toulemonde, M. (2011). Narrating shared identity. In H. Anheier, Y. R. Isar & D. Viejo-Rose (Eds.) Heritage, memory, identity: Cultures and globalization, Vol. 4 (pp. 252-261). London: Sage Publications.Ìý
  • Schiff, B. & O’Neill, T. (2007). The relational emplotment of mixed race identity. In R. Josselson, A. Lieblich & D. P. McAdams (Eds.) The narrative study of lives: The meaning of others (pp. 143-163). Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association.
  • Schiff, B., Skillingstead, H., Archibald, O., Arasim, A. & Petersen, J. (2006). Consistency and change in the repeated narratives of Holocaust survivors. Narrative Inquiry, 16 (2), 349-377.
  • Schiff, B. (2006). The promise (and challenge) of an innovative narrative psychology. Narrative Inquiry, 16 (1), 19-27.
  • Schiff, B. & Noy, C. (2006). Making it personal: Shared meanings in the narratives of Holocaust survivors. A. De Fina, D. Schiffrin, & M. Baumberg (Eds.) Discourse and identity (pp. 398-425). New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Schiff, B. (2005). Telling it in time: Interpreting consistency and change in the life stories of Holocaust survivors. International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 60 (3), 189-212.
  • Schiff, B. (2004). Narrating collective memory. Book review: J. V. Wertsch (2002). Voices of collective remembering. New York: Cambridge University Press. Contemporary Psychology APA Review of Books, 49 (2), 229-231.
  • Schiff, B. (2003). Book review: P. Suedfeld (Ed.) (2001). Light from the ashes: Social science careers of young Holocaust refugees and survivors. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Canadian Journal on Aging, 22, 136-137.
  • Schiff, B. (2002). Talking about identity: Arab students at the Hebrew University. Ethos, 30 (3), 273-304.
  • Wink, P. & Schiff, B. (2002). To review or not to review? The role of personality and life events in life review and adaptation to old age. In J. D. Webster & B. K. Haight (Eds.) Critical advances in reminiscence: From theory to application (pp. 44-60). New York: Springer-Verlag.
  • Schiff, B. & Cohler, B. (2001). Telling survival backward: Holocaust survivors narrate the past. In: Kenyon, G. M., Clark, P. G., & de Vries, B. Narrative gerontology: Theory, research and practice (pp. 113-136). New York: Springer.
  • Schiff, B., Noy, C. & Cohler, B. (2001). Collected stories in the life narratives of Holocaust survivors. Narrative Inquiry, 11 (1), 159-194.

Conferences & Lectures

Interviews

University of Michigan, Department of Psychology, Alumni Profiles.Ìý

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Affiliations

  • Schiff was lead organizer of Narrative Matters 2012: Life and Narrative. He is co-organizer of Narrative Matters 2014: Narrative Knowing/Récit et Savoir with Sylvie Patron (University of Paris-Diderot).
  • Schiff is on the editorial board of Narrative Works and Qualitative Psychology.
  • The American Psychological Association
  • The Society for Personology