Peter Preston Brooks (born 1938)[1] is an Americanliterary theorist who isSterling Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature atYale University and Andrew W. Mellon Scholar in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Center for Human Values atPrinceton University. He has been Professor in the Department of English and School of Law at theUniversity of Virginia. Among his many accomplishments is the founding of the Whitney Humanities Center at Yale University. He was elected to theAmerican Philosophical Society in 2003.[2] Brooks is an interdisciplinary scholar whose work cuts across French and English literature, law, and psychoanalysis. He was influenced by fellow Yale scholar,Paul de Man, to whom his bookReading for the Plot is dedicated.[3] His 2022 bookSeduced By Story was a finalist for the 2023 National Book Critics Circle award in criticism.[4]
Brooks has five children.[1][5] On July 18, 1959, Brooks married Margaret Elisabeth Waters.[1] On May 12, 2001, Brooks married the law professor, author and commentator,Rosa Brooks.[5] The couple later divorced.[6]
Brooks, Peter (1973), "Man and His Fictions: One Approach to the Teaching of Literature",College English,35 (1):40–49,doi:10.2307/375195,JSTOR375195
"Structuralist Poetics. Structuralism, Linguistics, and the Study of Literature by Jonathan Culler",Diacritics,6 (1):23–26, 1976,doi:10.2307/465029,ISSN0300-7162,JSTOR465029
Brooks, Peter (1978), "Godlike Science/Unhallowed Arts: Language and Monstrosity in Frankenstein",New Literary History,9 (3):591–605,doi:10.2307/468457,JSTOR468457
Brooks, Peter (1979), "Fictions of the Wolfman: Freud and Narrative Understanding",Diacritics,9 (1):71–81,doi:10.2307/464701,JSTOR464701
Brooks, Peter (1980), "Repetition, Repression, and Return: Great Expectations and the Study of Plot",New Literary History,11 (3):503–526,doi:10.2307/468941,JSTOR468941
^abSherman, Scott."Class Warrior".Scott Sherman. Retrieved17 April 2021.Ehrenreich moved to Charlottesville in 2001 to be near her thirty-two-year-old daughter, Rosa, a law professor at the University of Virginia, and her granddaughter, Anna, now two. (She also has a son, Ben, who writes for L.A. Weekly.) When Ehrenreich is in town, she will often, in the late afternoon, get in her Honda Civic — which bears a "Proud to Be An American Against War" bumper sticker — and drive to Rosa's farmhouse on the outskirts of Charlottesville, a place Rosa shares with her husband, the Yale literary critic Peter Brooks, who is currently teaching at UVA.