Frederick Crews

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Frederick Crews
Frederick Crews.JPG
(2005)
Born 1933
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Residence Berkeley, California
Nationality American
Fields American literature
Institutions University of California, Berkeley
Known for The Pooh Perplex

Critique of Sigmund Freud

Essays on American literature

Frederick Campbell Crews (born 1933) is an American essayist and literary critic. Professor Emeritus of English at the University of California, Berkeley,[1] Crews is the author of numerous books, including The Tragedy of Manners: Moral Drama in the Later Novels of Henry James (1957), E. M. Forster: The Perils of Humanism (1962) and The Sins of the Fathers (1966), a discussion of the work of Nathaniel Hawthorne. He received popular attention for The Pooh Perplex (1963), a book of satirical essays parodying contemporary casebooks. Initially a proponent of psychoanalytic literary criticism, Crews later rejected psychoanalysis, becoming a critic of Sigmund Freud's scientific and ethical standards. Crews was a prominent participant in the "Freud wars" of the 1980s and 90s, a debate over the reputation, scholarship and impact on the 20th century of the founder of psychoanalysis.

Crews has published a variety of skeptical and rationalist essays, including book reviews and commentary for The New York Review of Books, on a variety of topics including Freud and recovered memory therapy, some which were published as The Memory Wars (1995). Crews has also published successful handbooks for college writers, such as The Random House Handbook.

Life and career

Personal life

Crews was born in suburban Philadelphia in 1933.[2] Both of his parents were avid readers and were tremendously influential in his life, said Crews; “They had both been raised in considerable poverty, and books had been extremely important to them personally, in shaping them. My mother was very literary; my father was very scientific. I feel that I got a little something of both sides.”[3] In high school, Crews was co-captain of the tennis team, and he has continued to be an avid skier, hiker, swimmer, motorcyclist, and runner.[2] Crews lives in Berkeley with his wife of 52 years, Elizabeth Crews, a photographer who was born and raised in Berkeley, California.[2] They have two daughters and four grandchildren.[2]

Education

Crews completed his undergraduate education at Yale University in 1955.[4] Though his degree was in English, Crews entered the Directed Studies program during his first two years at Yale, which he describes as his greatest experience because the program was taught by a coordinated faculty and required students to distribute their courses among sciences, social sciences, literature, and philosophy.[3] He received his Ph.D in Literature from Princeton University in 1958.[4] Crews cited Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Friedrich Nietzsche, Hawthorne, and Freud as his major influences during his time at Princeton.[3]

Career

In 1958, Crews joined the UC Berkeley English Department, where he taught for 36 years before retiring as its chair in 1994.[2][5] Crews was an anti-war activist from 1965 to about 1970[3] and advocated draft resistance as co-chair of Berkeley’s Faculty Peace Committee.[2] Though he shared the widespread assumption during the mid-1960s that psychoanalytic theory was a valid account of human motivation and was one of the first academics to apply that theory systematically to the study of literature, Crews gradually came to regard psychoanalysis as a pseudoscience.[2] This convinced him that his loyalty should not belong to any theory but rather to empirical standards and the skeptical point of view. Throughout his career, Crews has brought his concern for rational discourse to the study of various issues, from the controversy over recovered memory, the credibility of the Rorschach test, and belief in alien abductions to the Theosophical Society, creationism, and “intelligent design.” He has also advocated for clear writing based on standards of sound argument and rhetorical effectiveness rather than adherence to rigid school-book rules.[2][6] “What interests me is general rationality,” said Crews,

General rationality requires us to observe the world carefully, to consider alternative hypotheses to our own hypotheses, to gather evidence in a responsible way, to answer objections. These are habits of mind that science shares with good history, good sociology, good political science, good economics, what have you. And I summarize all this in what I call the "empirical attitude." It's a combination of feeling responsible to the evidence that is available, feeling responsible to go out and find that evidence, including the evidence that is contrary to one's presumptions, and responsibility to be logical with one's self and others. And this is an ideal that is not so much individual as social. The rational attitude doesn't really work when simply applied to one's self. It is something that we owe to each other.[3]

Publications

Satire

In 1963, Crews published his first bestseller The Pooh Perplex: A Student Casebook that satirized the type of casebooks then assigned to first-year university students in introductory literature and composition courses. Derived in part from a play put on by Crews's English department in 1958, the book featured a fictitious set of English professors writing essays on A. A. Milne's classic character Winnie-the-Pooh, parodying Marxist, Freudian, Christian, Leavisite and Fiedlerian approaches to analyzing literary texts. Though urged by readers to publish a follow-up volume, Crews delayed writing one until after his retirement in 1994, producing Postmodern Pooh in 2001. While the Pooh Perplex parodies earlier trends in literary criticism, Postmodern Pooh parodies later trends in literary theory.[7] In it, Crews extends the satire of the original, covering more recent critical approaches. such as deconstruction, feminism, queer theory, and recovered memory therapy, in part basing the essay authors and their approaches on actual academics and their work.[4]

In The Patch Commission (1968), Crews satirized the activities of Presidential Commissions, displaying his disapproval of American involvement in the then-ongoing Vietnam War.[8][9] The book is a transcription of the work of the fictional Patch Commission, a discussion among three government commissioners attempting to save the nation from disaster caused by Benjamin Spock's overly permissive child-rearing guidelines.[10]

Literary criticism

Much of Crews's career has been dedicated to literary criticism. Crews's first book, The Tragedy of Manners: Moral Drama in the Later Novels of Henry James (1957), was based on a prize-winning essay written by Crews while an undergraduate student at Yale University, initially published as part of a series.[11][12] In the book, Crews discussed three late novels by Henry James: The Ambassadors (1903), The Wings of the Dove (1902), and The Golden Bowl (1904), analyzing the function and tensions within a system of manners, the interaction between an individual's ethics and their reflection within the values of a community.[11][13]

In 1962, Crews's doctoral dissertation from Princeton University was published as E. M. Forster: The Perils of Humanism.[14] In 1966, he published a study of Hawthorne, The Sins of the Fathers: Hawthorne's Psychological Themes, which examined Hawthorne's entire literary career including unfinished novels; it was re-issued in 1989 with Crews's reassessment of his initial position and an analysis of how literary criticism has dealt with Hawthorne since 1966.[15][16] In 1970, Crews edited Psychoanalysis and Literary Process, a collection of essays by his students that analyzed a variety of authors from a psychoanalytic perspective; a review credited the book with important accomplishments, including being "an achievement in the teaching and learning of psychoanalysis in a department of literature", which the reviewer noted was a rare occurrence.[17][18] The collection included an essay, "Anaesthetic Criticism", in which Crews disparaged contemporary schools of literary criticism, especially that of Northrop Frye and his followers.[19]

In 1986, Crews published The Critics Bear It Away, which was wholly devoted to literary criticism.[20] The work was seen as part of a liberal revival within education after a long period of conservatism focusing on the revision of the Western canon, and filled with an internal conflict between Crews's sympathies with and opposition to the revisionist position.[9] It was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award for nonfiction[21] and won the Spielvogel-Diamonstein Award for the Art of the Essay Winners.[22]

Parts of his 1975 collection Out of My System,[23] the 1986 collection Skeptical Engagements,[24] and the 2005 Follies of the Wise[25] were also dedicated to literary criticism. Crews's repeated message to literary critics is to be critical of their own interpretation when making statements about the meaning of a work.[3] Regarding Crews's position on literary criticism, C. A. Runcie notes, “What Frederick Crews says about psychoanalysis is true for all criticism and its theorizing: 'A critic's sense of limits, like Freud's own, must come from … his awe at how little he can explain.'”[26] Crews has been identified by literary theorist Joseph Carroll as one of "the very few scholars who have consistently and effectively opposed poststructuralism."[27]

Criticism of Freud and psychoanalysis

Crews began his career using psychoanalytic literary criticism but gradually rejected this approach and psychoanalysis in general. In his article "Reductionism and Its Discontents", published in Out of My System in 1975, Crews stated his belief that psychoanalysis can be usefully applied to literary criticism but expressed growing doubts about its use as a therapeutic approach, suggesting that it had a weak, sometimes comical tradition of criticism.[23] Crews rejected psychoanalysis entirely in his article "Analysis Terminable" (first published in Commentary in 1980 and reprinted in his collection Skeptical Engagements in 1986) citing what he considered its faulty methodology, its ineffectiveness as therapy, and the harm it caused to patients.[24]

In 1996, Crews credited Henri F. Ellenberger's The Discovery of the Unconscious (1970) with beginning a twenty-five-year-long reevaluation of the position of psychoanalysis within the history of medicine, and acknowledged other book-length critical analyses of Freud and psychotherapy, including Frank Sulloway's Freud, Biologist of the Mind (1979), Adolf Grünbaum's The Foundations of Psychoanalysis (1984), and Malcolm Macmillan's Freud Evaluated: The Completed Arc (1991).[28] Crews wrote the foreword to the revised 1997 edition of Freud Evaluated, suggesting that its republication "advanced the long debate over psychoanalysis to what may well be its decisive moment".[29]

Crews, who describes himself as "a one-time Freudian who had decided to help others resist the fallacies to which I had succumbed in the 1960s",[30] sees his criticisms of Freud as two-pronged – one aimed at Freud's ethical and scientific standards, and the other aimed at showing that psychoanalysis is a pseudoscience.[31][32] Two of his essays, "Analysis Terminable" and "The Unknown Freud", published in 1993, have been described as shots fired at the beginning of the "Freud Wars", a long-running debate over Freud's reputation, work and impact.[33][34] "The Unknown Freud" prompted an unprecedented number of letters to the The New York Review of Books for several issues.[30]

Crews went on to criticize Freud and psychoanalysis extensively, becoming a major figure in the discussions and criticisms of Freud that occurred during the 1980s and '90s. Crews was one of a number of critics who protested an exhibit presented at the Library of Congress in 1998, as too positive and favorable to Freud; the protests delayed the exhibit's opening by almost a year, and almost cancelled it outright.[35]

Criticism of recovered memory therapy

In 1993 and 1994, Crews wrote a series of critical essays and reviews of books relating to repressed and recovered memories,[36] which also provoked heated debate and letters to the editors of The New York Review of Books.[30] The essays, along with critical and supporting letters and his responses, were published as The Memory Wars (1995).[37] Crews believes the memories and fantasies of childhood seduction Freud reported were not real memories but constructs that Freud created and forced upon his patients. According to Crews, the seduction theory that Freud abandoned in the late 1890s acted as a precedent and contributing factor to the wave of false allegations of childhood sexual abuse in the 1980s and 1990s.[38]

Crews is a member of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation's advisory board[39] and has been described as "leading a backlash against recovered memory therapy."[40]

Other interests

Writing handbooks

In 1974, Crews published The Random House Handbook, a best-selling college composition textbook that offered extensive rhetorical advice for writing academic essays as well as reference information on correct and effective use of the English language. The book brought together two aspects of writing instruction not generally covered in a single text. It was widely praised for being highly readable and helpful and was written in a clear, often elegant style, with occasional flashes of humor, something rare in college writing handbooks then or now.[41] It was also highly successful,[42] running to nine editions. Crews also co-authored three editions of The Borzoi Handbook for Writers for McGraw-Hill.[43]

The New York Review of Books

In his capacity as a reviewer for The New York Review of Books, Crews has written on various topics including:

Honors and awards

  • Fulbright Lectureship, Turin, Italy, 1961–62
  • Essay Prize, National Council on the Arts and Humanities, 1968
  • Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, 1965–66
  • Guggenheim Fellowship (Literary criticism), 1970[50]
  • Distinguished Teaching Award, University of California, Berkeley, 1985[51]
  • Election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1991[52]
  • Faculty Research Lecturer, University of California, Berkeley, 1991–92
  • Editorial Board, “Rethinking Theory” series, Northwestern University Press, 1992–present
  • Nomination for National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction (The Critics Bear It Away), 1992[21]
  • PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay (The Critics Bear It Away), 1993[22]
  • Berkeley Citation, 1994[53]
  • Inclusion in The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2002, ed. Natalie Angier (Houghton Mifflin), 2002
  • Fellow, Commission for Scientific Medicine and Mental Health, 2003–present[54]
  • Berkeley Fellow, 2005–present
  • Inclusion in The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2005, ed. Jonathan Weiner (Houghton Mifflin), 2005
  • Nominated for National Book Critics Circle Award (Follies of the Wise), 2006

Bibliography

As author

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As editor

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As contributor

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Notes

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  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Fuchs, J. (28 Mar 2006). “Books: Crews skewers Follies of the Wise in new collection.” The Berkeley Daily Planet. [1]
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Kreisler, H. (Interviewer) & Crews, F. (Interviewee). (1999). "Criticism and the Empirical Attitude: Conversation with Frederick Crews" [Interview transcript]. Retrieved from Conversations with History; Institute of International Studies, University of California, Berkeley Web site.
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  7. Giffin, M. (2012). "Literary academics are full of pooh." Quadrant, LVI(1-2), 25-29.
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  26. Runcie, C. A. (1990). "Dignifying Signifying: A Meditation on Interpretation." The Journal of the Sydney University Arts Association, 15, 71-86.
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  31. Wade, C., Tavris, C. (2011). Psychology (10th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-205-71146-8
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  33. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (subscription required)
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  44. Kramer, M. (2001). "Imagining Authorship in America: "Whose American Renaissance?" Revisited." American Literary History, 13 (1), 108-125.
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External links

Interviews