Research Harrower became interested in clinical psychology when she observed major changes in a friend's personality after surgery. This allowed the Rorschach to be given to large groups in as little as 15 minutes, in comparison to the normally administered Rorschach that could take an hour per individual. The Multiple Choice Rorschach attracted a flurry of attention in the few years after, but test was ultimately found to be of little value. In 1941 Harrower moved from Montreal to
Madison, Wisconsin where her husband, neurosurgeon Theodore Erickson, had obtained a position at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison medical school.
Clinical practice Harrower opened a private practice in New York City in 1945, one of the first clinical psychologists to do so. She specialized in psychodiagnostic testing of medical patients referred to her by psychiatrists, neurologists and other physicians, using the Rorschach test as her primary tool. After undergoing psychoanalysis herself from 1944 to 1946 she extended her practice to include psychotherapy. She also did consulting work for organizations such as the Children’s Court of Manhattan, the
National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the
Unitarian-Universalist Church. In 1972 she was awarded the
Bruno Klopfer Award by the
Society for Personality Assessment. The University of Florida made her an honorary
Doctor of Humane Letters in March 1981. She established the Molly Harrower Women's Golf Endowment at the University of Florida.
Publications Harrower's publications include 20 books and more than 100 articles and book chapters. In 1976 Harrower published a notable article based on the examination of records of Rorschach tests administered to
Nazi war criminals immediately after the Second World War. She found that they did not show any common personality type, and that some appeared to be psychologically normal. Based on this conclusion, she cautioned that "well-integrated, productive and secure personalities are no protection against being sucked into a vortex of myth and deception, which may ultimately erupt into the commitment of horror on a grand scale". This research led to her collaboration on a book published in 1995 entitled
The Quest for the Nazi Personality: A Psychological Investigation of Nazi War Criminals. ==Personal life==