
One of the most insightful thinkers and teachers ever to be employed at Pacific was Anna Berliner, a psychologist by title, but also an anthropologist, sociologist, optometrist and visual researcher.
âShe made distinguished contributions to three different fields of knowledge and she reported them in three different languages,â noted M. Alpern, who delivered the first Anna Berliner Lecture at Pacific in 1978.
Born in 1888 in Halberstadt, Germany, Berliner lived a remarkable life. Her own typewritten CV covering the years up to 1946, which lists her student days at universities in Freiburg, Berlin, Leipzig, Tokyo, Berkeley, New York and Columbus, Ohio, along with professional experiences in Newark, New York, Tokyo, Columbus, Maywood, Ill., includes this note: "Interruptions in the chronological list of professional work are due to two wars, a revolution, the Japanese earthquake and research work.â
Among the interruptions were deportation from Japan to the United States in 1914, when her husband was interned as an enemy alien, and fleeing Germany in 1936 as the Nazis increasingly restricted and threatened Jews.
Some of her most noted papers and lectures included studies of the Japanese tea culture, perceptual issues that affect results of Rorschach tests, the aesthetic judgments of schoolchildren, the distortion of straight and curved lines in geometrical fields, the âatmospheric influenceâ of fonts in advertising, and âthe psychological field as determinant factor in vision.â
Berliner was named a Lifetime Fellow of the International Council of Psychologists in 1963 and received the Apollo Award, a high honor from the American Optometric Association, in 1971.
"She taught by her example, by discussing what she had read and by how she responded to one's reply to her discussion. Her criticisms were always sharp and hard though never unkind, but her standards were high."
âM. Alpern
She came to Pacific as an associate professor in psychology in 1949, the universityâs centennial year. She became a full professor and dean of the department before retiring in 1963. After retiring, she taught German to schoolchildren in Forest Grove.
Shockingly, she was murdered in her Forest Grove home in 1977 by a Cornelius teenager who had been going door to door to collect money in a fundraising scam. It appears from accounts that emerged from the murder trial that Berliner refused to give him money and threatened to call the police. He went inside her house and beat and stabbed her to death. The teenager was convicted of murder in 1979 and sentenced to life in prison, though he was later released.
âAlways she taught,â Alpern said. âShe taught by her example, by discussing what she had read and by how she responded to oneâs reply to her discussion. Her criticisms were always sharp and hard, though never unkind, but her standards were high.â
Berliner, who also served on the College of Optometryâs Faculty Committee, taught College of Optometry Professor Emeritus Willard âWidâ Bleything â51, OD â52, MS â54.
Berliner brought a valuable perspective to the study of optometry, Bleything said. She didnât teach about the biology of the eye, nor the craft of optics; rather, she focused on the study of visual perception, or how the brain understands and processes the images delivered by the eyes.
âWe learned a ton,â said Bleything, who recalled the way Berlinerâs mind sometimes raced faster than her accented English. She would speak rapidly in English, pause, mutter in German, then ask âEh?â to see if the students had understood. Often, said Bleything, they didnât.
She and her husband sometimes joined students on a ski bus to Mount Hood, where they skied rings around the Americans. They were a classically European couple, he said.
Was she a pioneer?
âShe didnât know that, but she was,â Bleything said. âShe stimulated a lot of good thinking about behavioral vision. She was a really good fit.â
This story first appeared in the Fall 2019 issue of Pacific magazine.