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  1. John Edward Mack (October 4, 1929 – September 27, 2004) was an American psychiatrist, writer, and professor of psychiatry. He served as the head of the department of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School from 1977 to 2004. In 1977, Mack won the Pulitzer Prize for his book A Prince of Our Disorder on T.E. Lawrence. [1]

  2. The question, shouted across the foyer of the Massachusetts Medical Society, was a measure of how far Harvard Professor of Psychiatry John Mack, an eminent practitioner, researcher, and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, had fallen in the estimation of some of his peers by the early 2000s.

    • Niall Boyce
    • 2012
  3. Sep 30, 2004 · Dr. John E. Mack, a Pulitzer Prize winner and Harvard psychiatrist who studied people who said they had encounters with alien beings, died in London on Monday. He was 74 and lived in...

  4. Dec 8, 2005 · A tribute to John E. Mack, a distinguished psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and Pulitzer Prize winner, who died in 2004. He was a teacher, mentor, and social activist who explored diverse topics such as nightmares, suicide, Lawrence of Arabia, and alien contact.

  5. Esteemed professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Edward Mack M.D. (October 4, 1929 – Sep 27, 2004) spent his career examining how a sense of connection develops across cultures and between individuals, and how these connections alter people’s worldviews.

  6. The John Mack Institute (JMI) is named in recognition of the Pulitzer Prize-winning author, and Professor of Psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School, Dr. John E. Mack (1929-2004). Through his warmth, compassion, and courage, John had a profound impact upon the many lives he touched.

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  8. When this Pulitzer Prize–winning biography first appeared in 1976, it rescued T.E. Lawrence from the mythologizing that had seemed to be his fate. In it, John Mack humanely and objectively explores the relationship between Lawrence’s inner life and his historically significant actions.