Lewis Coser Remembered
by Andrew Perrin, University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill
I
am fortunate to have known Lewis Coser, quite literally, all my life.
Since he thought “Grandpa” was too pedestrian and his native
“Grossvater” or “Opa” too Germanic, I knew him first as “grand-pe`re,”
a name he and Rose—both Francophiles—chose when I was born. As I became
more aware, first of his political persona and, later, his academic
one, I gained additional admiration for his remarkable life.
Born
Ludwig Cohen in Berlin in 1913 (his father later changed the family
name), Coser left for Paris in 1933. There he studied comparative
literature and sociology at the Sorbonne and was active in Marxist
politics. In 1940, he was arrested by the French government, which, as
he told the story, rounded up all native Germans, even Jewish
anti-fascists, and placed them in internment camps in the South of
France. As a result of an expansion of U.S. quotas for immigration of
political exiles, and with the assistance of the International Relief
Association, he traveled through Marseilles and Portugal and boarded a
boat to New York in 1941.
On
the advice of an immigration official, he changed his name from Ludwig
to Lewis. Anxious to thank the caseworker at the International Relief
Association who had worked to obtain a visa for him, he met Rose Laub
and soon married her. The two began a lifelong companionship and
collaboration, studying at Columbia University under, among others,
Robert K. Merton and Paul Lazarsfeld, and both received PhDs in
sociology. Rose Laub Coser—also a pathbreaking sociologist and a
founding member of Sociologists for Women in Society—died in 1994.
Lewis Coser’s dissertation, The Functions of Social Conflict, became a classic in social theory, and was listed in a 1997 Contemporary Sociology review as one of the best-selling sociology books of the century.
During
the postwar years, Coser was a member of the circle of leftist
intellectuals active in New York. He wrote for several political
magazines, including Dwight MacDonald’s Politics, Partisan Review, The Progressive, Commentary, and The Nation. Along with Irving Howe and others, he founded Dissent magazine and served as a co-editor for many years.
Coser
taught at several universities, including the General College of the
University of Chicago as well as the University of California-Berkeley.
He founded the sociology department at Brandeis University and taught
there for more than 15 years before joining the sociology department at
the State University of New York-Stony Brook, where he remained until
his retirement. In 1987 the Cosers retired to Cambridge, Massachusetts,
where Lewis Coser was Professor Emeritus, first at Boston College and
then at Boston University. He was the author or editor of more than 18
books, including the classics Men of Ideas and Masters of Sociological Thought,
and the author of numerous articles. He was president of the Society
for the Study of Social Problems in 1967-68, the American Sociological
Association in 1975, and the Eastern Sociological Association in 1983.
In
Stony Brook, the Cosers were famous for their monthly “salons,” to
which scores of guests would come for gourmet food, drink, and
intellectual stimulation. Similarly, at their house in Wellfleet on
Cape Cod, they welcomed friends, colleagues, comrades, and students to
a summer-long series of cocktail and dinner parties at the pond.
Although
he prided himself on separating his political and sociological
thinking, he was critical of modern American sociology’s abandonment of
social criticism for what his ASA presidential address called “the
fallacy of misplaced precision.” I traveled with him to East Berlin,
Dresden, and Leipzig in 1990, where he warned in his lectures that
sociology was “in danger of losing its critical bite.”
His
love of books and reading permeated his life. I remember, as a child,
walking with him in downtown Boston when we found a small amount of
money on the ground. He quickly walked me to the nearest bookstore and
bought me Gulliver’s Travels, reading it to me later. Late in
his life, he proclaimed, “if ever I can’t read, that’s when I want to
go.” Less than two weeks before his death, he found it too difficult to
continue reading.
When
my son, his first great-grandson, was visiting him at his Wellfleet
house at the age of 9 months, during the summer of 2001, we asked him
what it felt like to be a great-grandfather. “It’s wonderful,” he
replied. “You get all of the honor with none of the work!” His charm,
wit, intellect, and commitment will be remembered and continued by
colleagues, students, and family.
A
memorial service will be held in the fall at SUNY-Stony Brook. The
Theory Section of the ASA will be awarding an annual Lewis Coser Prize
in his memory; those wishing to contribute to that memorial may send
checks to the Lewis Coser Memorial Fund at the American Sociological
Association, 1307 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20005.
In
addition to me, his grandson, Coser is survived by his partner, Leona
Robbins of Cambridge, MA; his daughter, Ellen Coser Perrin, of
Brookline, MA; his son, Steven Coser, of Melrose, MA; two other
grandsons: E. Benjamin Perrin, of Cherryfield, ME; and Matthew Coser,
of Melrose, MA; and a great-grandson, Jonah Perrin, of Chapel Hill, NC.
Sociologists Remember
Lewis Coser
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