Papers relating to works written or edited by Laing; patient's records; correspondence; autobiographical and personal papers including notebooks and diaries; plans and project papers; certificates and financial papers; biographical papers on Laing by others including a draft biography by Adrian Laing, his son and papers relating to the Laing family history and genealogy; press cuttings; drafts and offprints by others sent to Laing; audio-visual materials, artwork; artefacts.
Papers of Ronald David Laing, psychotherapist, 1928-1989
This material is held atUniversity of Glasgow Special Collections
- Reference
- GB 247 MS Laing
- Dates of Creation
- 20th century
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English
- Physical Description
- 22 linear metres
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
Ronald David Laing was born in Govanhill, Glasgow, Scotland, in 1927. He started at Hutchesons' Boys' Grammar School, Glasgow, in 1932 where he excelled in Classics and Music being elected a Licentiate of the Royal Academy of Music on 30th March 1944, and an associate of the Royal College of Music in April 1945. During his time at school he also read numerous works of philosophy, including Freud, Marx, Nietzsche and especially Kierkegaard.
Laing attended the University of Glasgow between 1945-1951, studying medicine and graduating MB ChB on the second attempt in 1951. During this time he worked briefly as a houseman on a psychiatric ward, which inspired him to pursue psychiatry.
In 1951 Laing was conscripted into the Royal Army Medical Corps. Upon leaving the Army in 1953 he went to Gartnavel Royal Mental Hospital, Glasgow, to complete his psychiatric training. There he set up an experimental treatment setting known as the 'Rumpus Room', where schizophrenic patients spent time in a comfortable room. Both staff and patients wore normal clothes, and patients were allowed to spend time doing activities such as cooking and art, the idea being to provide a setting where patients could respond to staff and each other in a social, rather than institutional setting. The patients all showed a noticeable improvement in behaviour as a result of this. Laing later moved to a Senior Registrar's post at the Southern General Hospital and qualified as a psychiatrist 1st January 1956.
After reading Colin Wilson's book 'The Outsider', in 1956, Laing vowed to emulate his work and began writing 'The Divided Self'. Later the same year he was appointed as a Senior Registrar at the Tavistock Clinic, London and began training as a psychoanalyst with the Institute of Psychoanalysis.
'The Divided Self' was published in 1960 and received favourable reviews but at first did not sell well. Laing qualified as a psychoanalyst and set up a private practice at 21 Wimpole Street, London and began to experiment with drugs, especially LSD.
Laing was appointed Clinical Director of the Langham Clinic in London in 1962 and in the following year began to appear in the popular media. In 1964 he wrote most of the articles that were later compiled into his most successful publication, 'The Politics of Experience' and 'The Bird of Paradise' (1967), and appeared on British television five times. 'Sanity, Madness and the Family', which had been co-authored with Aaron Esterson was published, as was 'Reason and Violence', which was co-authored with David Cooper.
In 1965 the reissue of 'The Divided Self' by Penguin Books, became an immediate best seller. In the same year the Kingsley Hall project was opened, with Aaron Esterson, David Cooper and others. This was an experimental, non-hierarchical community, where schizophrenics were given space to work through their psychoses without resort to drugs, ECT or surgery. Inspiration came from Laing's 'Rumpus Room' project, Cooper's 'Villa 21', a community for schizophrenics with no distinctions made between staff and patients, and Esterson's experiences of a kibbutz for schizophrenics in Israel. The project ran until its closure in 1970.
Laing's 'Knots' was published in 1971, a year that also saw Laing travel to Sri Lanka with his second wife and their two children where they spent two months studying meditation in a Buddhist retreat. After their visas expired, they moved on to India, where Laing spent three weeks studying under Gangroti Baba, a Hindu ascetic, who initiated Laing into the cult of the Hindu goddess Kali. He also spent time learning Sanskrit and visiting Govinda Lama, who had been a guru to Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert.
Following his return to London in 1972, he embarked upon a lecture tour of the United States where he appeared on TV. He met Elizabeth Fehr, a psychotherapist who used 'rebirthing' psychodramas to treat patients. Laing adopted these rebirthing techniques himself in 1973.
1976 saw the publication of 'Do You Love Me?' and 'The Facts of Life'. These works sold poorly in Britain and America, but were popular in continental Europe. 'Conversations With Children' was published two years later. In 1985 Laing published his autobiography, 'Wisdom, Madness and Foll'y and the same year a portrait of him was unveiled at the National Portrait Gallery of Scotland.
Laing was forced into resigning from the medical register of the General Medical Council in 1987, effectively preventing him from practising medicine. Laing died two years later in August 1989 of a heart attacked while playing tennis in St Tropez, France.
Arrangement
The material is arranged into series
Access Information
Access to records within this collection is restricted due to the sensitive and personal nature of the records in accordance with data protection legislation. Please email Archives and Special Collections for advice: library-asc@glasgow.ac.uk
Acquisition Information
Purchase : Estate of R.D. Laing : 1997 : ACCN 4692
Other Finding Aids
See also University of Glasgow Collections
Appraisal Information
This material has been appraised in line with standard GB 247 procedures
Custodial History
Held by the family of R D Laing
Accruals
- Gift Dr Isobel Hunter-Brown : 7 May 1999 : ACCN 4736
- Gift Theodor Itten : 13 July 1999 : ACCN 4735
- Gift Theodor Itten : 17 June 2002 : ACCN 4863
- Gift Luke Fowler : 2002 : ACCN 4867
- Gift Theodor Itten : 14 January 2003 : ACCN 4862
- Purchase : Luke Fowler : 2003 : ACCN 4851
- Gift Carol Pearlman : 30 September 2004 : ACCN 4858
- Gift Paul Zeal : 21 December 2004 : ACCN 4861
- Gift Diana Huntress : 6 June 2005 : ACCN 4880
- Purchase : Peter Davis, Villon Films : 2011 : ACCN 4991
- Transfer : Scottish Screen Archive with permission of New Zealand Film Archive : 2012 : ACCN 4997