Oliver James was born in 1953 to parents who were
psychoanalysts. He was educated at
Eton College, before studying Archaeology and Anthropology (specifically Social Anthropology) at
Magdalene College, Cambridge. He then took a further degree in Child Clinical Psychology at the
University of Nottingham. He was awarded an
honorary doctorate by the
University of Staffordshire in 2007. Upon graduating, James was employed as a Research Fellow at
Brunel University’s Institute of Organization and Social Studies, then worked at the NHS
Cassel Hospital in
Richmond, London, in a clinical psychology post. and as a Chartered Psychologist at the
British Psychological Society. He is registered with and regulated by the
United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy. In 2009 Mary Fitzgerald of
The Guardian described James as a "prolific
pop-psychologist. He appeared on BBC's
Newsnight in 2008, in the midst of the
Credit Crunch and demanded that
Theresa May, who was when a shadow minister, should apologize for the
Thatcherite policies which he believed had caused the crisis. Speaking on
Channel 4's 2013
Psychopath Night, James described the
credit crunch as a "mass outbreak of corporate psychopathy which resulted in something that very nearly crashed the whole world economy". In 2013 he was interviewed by Bob Hopkins of transitionnetwork.org about his books
Affluenza and
The Selfish Capitalist: The Origins of Affluenza. In 2016, writing for
The Guardian about his book
Upping Your Ziggy: How David Bowie Faced His Childhood Demons and How You Can Face Yours, James said "There are many ways for us to take charge of our personas, be it simply by self-reflection, with the help of friends, by writing novels or creating art, or through therapy. We simply need to get a dialogue going between our different parts." Speaking at the
Market Research Society annual conference, Impact 2017, he urged the audience to "embrace their multiple personas, just as the late
David Bowie did", saying: "To a degree we all have
multiple personality disorder – it shouldn't be called a disorder." James spoke on the subject at the 2016
Hay Festival. James is a patron of
Mothers at Home Matter and has been a trustee of the UK charities Contented Dementia Trust, National Family and Parenting Institute, and Home-Start UK. ==Criticism==