Rande Gail Brown
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Rande Gail Brown is an American writer, translator, and psychotherapist. She was one of the first women to graduate from Princeton University from which she holds a degree in East Asian Studies.
Rande is a founding board member and former Executive Director of the Tricycle Foundation, publisher of Tricycle: The Buddhist Review, America's leading Buddhist magazine. She is also president of East West Communications, a company that facilitates cultural understanding between Japan and the United States. A well-known translator of Japanese spiritual and cultural texts, Rande co-authored the New York Times bestseller Geisha, A Life with Mineko Iwasaki (Atria, 2002). Rande is also a founding board member of the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care, under whose auspices she trained as a Volunteer Chaplain and served at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City. She received her Master of Social Work degree from New York University and is a licensed psychotherapist with a specific focus on the intersection of Buddhism, spirituality, and psychology. Rande trained at the William Alanson White Institute of Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis & Psychology in New York City, New York, where she is on the Faculty, Supervisor in the IPPP program, and Associate Editor of Contemporary Psychoanalysis.[1] She is also on the Faculty of the Contemplative Studies Project of New York City. Rande is in private practice in Greenwich Village.
References[]
- ^ "When Mindfulness Is Not Enough". Psychology Today. Retrieved 2021-04-02.
External links[]
- Living people
- Princeton University alumni
- American biographers
- American businesspeople
- 21st-century American women writers
- American women biographers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- New York University School of Social Work alumni
- 21st-century American translators
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