Lewis Coser, Sociologist Who Focused on Intellectuals, Dies at 89 Lewis Alfred Coser, a politically active sociologist who grappled with the social role of intellectuals in influential books, articles and speeches, as well as in his personal politics, died on Tuesday in Cambridge, Mass. He was 89 and lived in Cambridge. Dr. Coser wrote or edited two dozen books; his doctoral dissertation became the book "The Functions of Social Conflict," a mainstay of post-World War II sociology. He sought to separate his leftist inclinations from his academic sociology. In 1954, with Irving Howe, he created the radical journal Dissent as he was editing a book of sociological theory. He taught at the General College of the University of Chicago and the University of California. He founded the sociology department at Brandeis University and taught there for 15 years before joining the sociology department of the State University of New York at Stony Brook. His interest in how intellectuals interact with real-world economic and
power concerns was apparent in his 1966 book, "Men of Ideas: A
Sociologist's View," which amounted to a historical analysis of what has
come to be called a public intellectual. Lewis S. Feuer
in The The book ranged from American abolitionists to Russian Bolsheviks to reach the conclusion that the intellectual is necessarily a person in opposition, a restless malcontent [ Methinks this characterization applies primarily to a select subset of the intellectual class of which Coser was a member -- JEWS.]. Dr. Coser worried that "the end of intellectuals" was occurring because intellectuals were being absorbed by government and corporations. [to their chagrin] He was born on Nov. 27, 1913, in Berlin. His name was originally Ludwig Cohen; his father later changed the family name, and he himself changed his first name on the advice of an American immigration official, his grandson Andrew Perrin said. His parents were upper middle class, but he joined the socialist movement as a teenager. When Hitler came to power, he fled to Paris, where he studied comparative literature and sociology at the Sorbonne and was active in Marxist politics. His studies were interrupted by World War II when the French government sent him to an internment camp in the South of France because he was German, despite his being an anti-fascist Jew. He was able to immigrate to the United States in 1941. He married Rose Laub, the caseworker at the International Relief Association who had obtained a visa for him. They earned doctorates in sociology from Columbia University and collaborated on academic work. She died in 1994. Dr. Coser is survived by his partner, Leona Robbins of Cambridge; his daughter, Ellen Coser Perrin of Brookline, Mass.; his son, Steven Coser of Melrose, Mass.; three grandsons; and a great-grandson. During the postwar years, Dr. Coser socialized with leftist intellectuals in New York and wrote for several political magazines, including Dwight MacDonald's Politics, Partisan Review and The Progressive. He did not shrink from criticizing those on the left. In 1958, The Daily Worker, a Communist newspaper, called his "American Communist Party: A Critical History (1919-1957) an "unscrupulous defense of the capitalist system." His politics remained leftist, if anti-Communist, as reflected by an autobiographical statement he made to the publication "Sociological Lives" in 1988, as reported in World of Sociology. "I have never been uncomfortable with being, to use the terminology of Chairman Mao, both pink and expert," he wrote.
Source file: MARTIN, DOUGLAS, NYT. July
12, 2003. |