Arleen McCarty Hynes (1916–2006) was a librarian, and later a Roman Catholic sister, who pioneered
bibliotherapy
Bibliotherapy (also referred to as book therapy, reading therapy, poetry therapy or therapeutic storytelling) is a creative arts therapy that involves storytelling or the reading of specific texts. It uses an individual's relationship to the co ...
. Hynes received the
Dorothea Dix award for her contributions, including an important book that remains standard. She is, in the words of
Shifra Baruchson-Arbib, "the person credited for creating the practical concept of modern bibliotherapy," and in the words of Dr. Nicholas Mazza, "one of the pioneers of biblio/poetry therapy."
Early life and education
She was born Mary Arleen McCarty, the daughter of Mary Gannon McCarty, who was born in Ballina Ireland, and Veatus Cantious McCarty, born in Iowa. She was one of a pair of premature identical twins, and her mother died in that childbirth. Because her father had seven other children to raise, she and her sister were brought up by a paternal aunt and uncle, Josie Dunn McCarty and James Maurice McCarty. After attending public elementary and high school, she graduated from Sheldon Junior College in 1936, and then attended the Vogue School of Dress Design (part of Vogue magazine) from 1936 to 1937. She then went to the
College of St. Catherine in Minnesota for two years (1938–40), graduated with degree in Library Science and worked for one year at Mandan North Dakota High School before her marriage.
Career
Work in Collegeville, Minnesota

After her marriage to Emerson Hynes, a professor at St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, she worked in the College of St. Benedict library. She and her husband hosted guests that included monks and visitors from St. John's, and they also brought together groups of Catholic artists, writers, and thinkers who were part of what was called "The Movement," including
Dorothy Day
Dorothy Day, Oblate#Secular oblates, OblSB (November 8, 1897 – November 29, 1980) was an American journalist, social activist and Anarchism, anarchist who, after a bohemianism, bohemian youth, became a Catholic Church, Catholic without aba ...
, sculptor Don Humphrey, and
J. F. and Betty Powers. Powers called her husband Emerson "a fervent practitioner and leader in the Catholic rural- and family-life movements." Arleen Hynes was part of the Catholic Rural Life Movement, the
Liturgical Movement
The Liturgical Movement was a 19th-century and 20th-century movement of scholarship for the reform of worship. It began in the Catholic Church and spread to many other Christian churches including the Anglican Communion, Lutheran and some other Pro ...
, and the
Christian Family Movement, and she served a term as National Family Life Chair for the Council of Catholic Women. As progressive Catholics they were both active in the
Catholic Worker movement, and the
Agrarian society
An agrarian society, or agricultural society, is any community whose economy is based on producing and maintaining crops and farmland. Another way to define an agrarian society is by seeing how much of a nation's total production is in agricultur ...
.
Work with Senator Eugene McCarthy in Washington, DC
In 1959, Democrat
Eugene McCarthy
Eugene Joseph McCarthy (March 29, 1916December 10, 2005) was an American politician, writer, and academic from Minnesota. He served in the United States House of Representatives from 1949 to 1959 and the United States Senate from 1959 to 1971. ...
(not to be confused with Republican
Joseph McCarthy
Joseph Raymond McCarthy (November 14, 1908 – May 2, 1957) was an American politician who served as a Republican Party (United States), Republican United States Senate, U.S. Senator from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death at age ...
of the 1950s anticommunist hearings) was elected a Senator from Minnesota. Hynes's husband Emerson had gone to college at St. John's with McCarthy, and been the best man in his wedding. Emerson Hynes left a 20-year academic career to move the family to Washington and become McCarthy's legislative assistant. They lived in Arlington, Virginia, and she served on the
National Council on Aging, hosted a study group on
Vatican II
The Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, commonly known as the or , was the 21st and most recent Catholic ecumenical councils, ecumenical council of the Catholic Church. The council met each autumn from 1962 to 1965 in St. Peter's Basilic ...
, and was president of the Virginia chapter of the
American Association of University Women
The American Association of University Women (AAUW), officially founded in 1881, is a non-profit organization that advances Justice, equity for women and girls through advocacy, education, and research. The organization has a nationwide Social net ...
, producing an important study in 1962.
McCarthy ran for president in 1968, and Arleen Hynes served as the head of Volunteers for McCarthy. Emerson Hynes suffered a small stroke and took disability leave from McCarthy's office. He retired in 1968 after McCarthy lost his bid to gain the US presidential nomination. The stress from the loss of their son, Michael, who drowned in the Potomac river in 1970 at age 18, may have weakened his health. The failed campaign also took a toll, and the combination may have led to Emerson Hynes's second, more serious stroke. He died of a heart attack at age 56 in 1971, eleven months after Michael died, leaving Arleen widowed with 9 children, and the youngest three still living at home.
Developing bibliotherapy at St. Elizabeths Hospital
In 1970, shortly before her husband's anticipated death and at his urging, Hynes found work as a patient's librarian at
St. Elizabeths Hospital
St. Elizabeths Hospital is a psychiatric hospital in Southeast, Washington, D.C., Southeast Washington, D.C. operated by the District of Columbia Department of Mental Health. The hospital opened in 1855 under the name Government Hospital for th ...
in Southeast Washington, DC, the nation's only federal mental hospital. They assigned her a room for the library that had formerly been the morgue. Although the library had existed since 1903 and was one of the earliest patient libraries in the country, it had no windows, only one skylight, and 10,000 uncatalogued books, with many piled high on the floor.
She expanded the library's services to more than 100 patients a week out of a population of 4,000, launched a lecture series and movie screenings, and allowed patients to read in the library and listen to music. She collected artwork that they could borrow to put in their rooms. She began a program reading to patients who she said "had never been read to before," and the groups included people who had experienced homelessness, battered women, former felons, alcoholics, and drug addicts.
She described a favorite group:
Early forerunners of the bibliotherapy she developed and taught were R. H. Schauffler's 1927 book ''The Poetry Cure: The Medicine Chest of Verse, Music and Picture,'' psychiatrist Smiley Blanton's 1960 ''The Healing Power of Poetry,'' and Dr. Jack Leedy's 1969 ''Poetry Therapy: The Use of Poetry in the Treatment of Emotional Disorders,'' among others.
Leedy's work inspired hers the most, and in the early 1970s, based on much of this work and more, she first founded the Bibliotherapy Roundtable, introducing the term widely and hosting lectures and readings. She embarked on a 1,000-hour program of work, analysis, and study to become a registered poetry therapist. After completing her own supervised training, she trained another bibliotherapist who became the first in the federal system, and she established the first such position as a government job. She was also a key figure in the founding of two other organizations that her daughter, Mary Hynes-Berry, considers as even more important for the recognition of this practice as a profession, the National Association for Poetry Therapy (NAPT), and the National Federation for Biblio/Poetry Therapy, which changed its name to the International Federation for Biblio-Poetry Therapy.
She was engaged with patients' drug therapies, but asserted that a therapy based on books and reading could also be healing. As Patricia Lefevre wrote of an interview with Hynes, However, none of the aforementioned books functioned as a comprehensive text, so her 1986 book was needed. She based it on a training program she launched in 1984, and her need for a text. After the book's publication, she and Dr. Kenneth Gorelick, head of psychiatric training, established the first training course in bibliotherapy, along with a certification program. They worked closely with bibliotherapist Rosalie Brown, whom Hynes helped hire.
Entrance into religious life
After leaving her job at St. Elizabeth's in 1981, she returned to Minnesota to enter the Sisters of St. Benedict in St. Joseph, Minnesota, just a few miles from St. John's and Collegeville. She professed first vows on the Feast of St. Benedict, July 11, 1981, almost 10 years to the date since her husband's death, and perpetual vows on the same date in 1985. For two decades she was a staffer and occasional instructor in the monastery Spirituality Center. She worked with battered women at a shelter, and with seniors and jail inmates. She is buried at St. Benedict's Monastery in Minnesota. A short feature about the creation of this Wikipedia article via
Women in Red and about her life appeared in the Spring 2024 edition of Benedictine Sisters and Friends magazine.
Books
She and one of her daughters published a 1986 book that the National Association for Poetry Therapy called "the first comprehensive text" on the subject of bibliotherapy. As of 2024 it has been in continuous print for 38 years.
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Other publications
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*Arleen McCarty Hynes, “Certification in the St. Elizabeth’s Hospital Bibliotherapy Training Program,” in Rhea J. Rubin, Using Bibliotherapy: A Guide to Theory and Practice (Phoenix, Arizona: Oryx Press, 1978), 201–12.
* Arleen McCarty Hynes, “Bibliotherapy in the Circulating Library at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital,” in Rhea J. Rubin (ed.), Bibliotherapy Source Book (Phoenix, Arizona: Oryx Press, 1978), 300–304.
* Arleen M. Hynes "The Goals of Bibliotherapy," Arts in Psychotherapy 7 (1980), 35–41.
*Arleen McCarty Hynes, "Poetry: An Avenue Into the Spirit," ''Journal of Poetry Therapy,'' 4:2, 1990, 71-81. doi=10.1007/bf01078545
Awards
* Dorothea Dix award, 1978, from St. Elizabeths Hospital for her contributions to the institution.
* National Association for Poetry Therapy (NAPT) award, 2002.
Personal life
She married Merton Emerson Hynes, who went by the name Emerson, on June 26, 1941, at St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, where he was a faculty member, teaching ethics, sociology, and philosophy. They were both Benedictine oblates of the adjoining
St. John's Abbey. The couple lived on a farm in the woods where they raised their own vegetables, kept cows and chickens, and built a house called Kilfenora, named after a village in
County Clare, Ireland. They had 10 children. Their eighth child and sixth son T.More (sic) called them "hippies before their time."
References
Further reading
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*Charles Rossiter, "Blessed and delighted: An interview with Arleen Hynes, Poetry Therapy Pioneer," ''Journal of Poetry Therapy,'' volume 17, no. 4, 2004, 215-222.
*Elizabeth Leibold McCloskey, ''Lives as Revelatory Texts: Constructing a Spiritual Biography of Arleen McCarty Hynes, O.S.B.'' (Ph.D. Dissertation, The Catholic University of America, ProQuest, UMI Dissertations Publishing, 2014.) https://doi.org/10.1080/0889367042000325085
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hynes, Arleen
1916 births
2006 deaths
American Benedictines
People from Iowa
Benedictine nuns
History of Washington, D.C.
American librarians
Bibliotherapy
American women librarians