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C. Wright Mills: Letters and Autobiographical Writings by C. Wright Mills — book cover

C. Wright Mills: Letters and Autobiographical Writings

by C. Wright Mills, Pamela Mills (Editor), Kathryn Mills
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Overview

"The extraordinary C. Wright Mills was an intellectual hero of the New Left, a model of the engaged academic. This volume of his letters and writings provides a fascinating insight into Mills as a person‹as a family man and a friend‹as well as a thinker. Mills packed so much into his terribly short life, and young people today should find inspiration in his enormous energy, his breadth of interest, and his political boldness."‹Howard Zinn, Boston University

"This carefully and lovingly edited volume is bound to revive interest in the work and life of one of the most creative radical intellectuals of the postwar years."‹Lewis A. Coser, Boston University

"C. Wright Mills was a passionate public citizen, and therefore, he wrote to be read beyond the academy. He succeeded, making many non-tenured people think, me included. This book further illuminates the life-force within this professor beyond borders."‹Nat Hentoff, author of Living the Bill of Rights

"C. Wright Mills: Letters and Autobiographical Writings is an invaluable guide to the thought and sensibilities of one of the greatest sociologists of the twentieth century. This book is a must for sociologists, social science students and historians."‹Saul Landau, Hugh O. La Bounty Chair of Applied Interdisciplinary Knowledge, California Polytechnic University

"The personal testimony of a courageous American thinker will afford younger readers a direct look at our past, and perhaps teach them—as Mills did for many of us—that living fully requires thinking largely."‹Norman Birnbaum, Georgetown University Law Center

"Mills was among the most intellectually engaging of American social scientists, and he deserves our continuing attention. As these letters and autobiographical essays bring out, he exemplified both a highly personal perspective and a commitment to issues of basic public importance. He saw the connections between biography and intellectual insight, and in this wonderfully edited collection, his writings demonstrate a clarity of perception that adds to our understanding of both his work and his period." ‹Craig Calhoun, President, Social Science Research Council

Author Biography: C. Wright Mills was a maverick social scientist who taught in Copenhagen, London, and Mexico City in addition to the United States. His work has been translated into twenty-three languages. Kathryn Mills works for a book publisher in Boston. Pamela Mills teaches American literature and composition in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Dan Wakefield is the author of New York in the Fifties (1992), which is the basis for a documentary film, Island in the City: The World of Spanish Harlem (1959), and many other works, including the best-selling novels Going All the Way (1970) and Selling Out (1985).

Synopsis

"The extraordinary C. Wright Mills was an intellectual hero of the New Left, a model of the engaged academic. This volume of his letters and writings provides a fascinating insight into Mills as a person—as a family man and a friend—as well as a thinker. Mills packed so much into his terribly short life, and young people today should find inspiration in his enormous energy, his breadth of interest, and his political boldness."—Howard Zinn, Boston University

"This carefully and lovingly edited volume is bound to revive interest in the work and life of one of the most creative radical intellectuals of the postwar years."—Lewis A. Coser, Boston University

"C. Wright Mills was a passionate public citizen, and therefore, he wrote to be read beyond the academy. He succeeded, making many non-tenured people think, me included. This book further illuminates the life-force within this professor beyond borders."—Nat Hentoff, author of Living the Bill of Rights

"C. Wright Mills: Letters and Autobiographical Writings is an invaluable guide to the thought and sensibilities of one of the greatest sociologists of the twentieth century. This book is a must for sociologists, social science students and historians."—Saul Landau, Hugh O. La Bounty Chair of Applied
Interdisciplinary Knowledge, California Polytechnic University

"The personal testimony of a courageous American thinker will afford younger readers a direct look at our past, and perhaps teach them—as Mills did for many of us—that living fully requires thinking largely."—Norman Birnbaum, Georgetown University Law Center

"Mills was among the most intellectually engaging of American social scientists, and he deserves our continuing attention. As these letters and autobiographical essays bring out, he exemplified both a highly personal perspective and a commitment to issues of basic public importance. He saw the connections between biography and intellectual insight, and in this wonderfully edited collection, his writings demonstrate a clarity of perception that adds to our understanding of both his work and his period." —Craig Calhoun, President, Social Science Research Council

John B. Judis

The anxious, conformist 1950's, it now appears, were a high-water mark in American social criticism from David Riesman, William F. Buckley Jr. and Dwight Macdonald to James Baldwin, Paul Goodman and, of course, C. Wright Mills. . . . Mills's view of his work as art and literature probably helped him to attain a certan objectivity even in the midst of his indignation.

About the Author, C. Wright Mills

C. Wright Mills was a maverick social scientist who taught in Copenhagen, London, and Mexico City in addition to the United States. His work has been translated into twenty-three languages. Kathryn Mills works for a book publisher in Boston. Pamela Mills teaches American literature and composition in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Dan Wakefield is the author of New York in the Fifties (1992), which is the basis for a documentary film, Island in the City: The World of Spanish Harlem (1959), and many other works, including the best-selling novels Going All the Way (1970) and Selling Out (1985).

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Editorials

Todd Gitlin

The 'Tovarich' essays are among the highlights of the long overdue C. Wright Mills: Letters and Autobiographical Writings ... a book of many revelations and felicities that sees the light of day 38 years after Mills' death. This volume ... is not a critical study, nor does it satisfy :to adapt Joyce Carol Oates' term) pathographic impulses. But it is indispensable to a picture of intellectuals and politics in our time, tracing out the contours of a robust life of the mind, an odyssey that seems as quaint today as anything in Homer.

Library Journal

Marks an important contribution to our understanding of the provocative work of eminent sociologist Mills. The editors' descriptions of the contexts of many letters, a chronology of Mills's life, and notes on correspondents enrich this volume.

Publisher's Weekly

This collection...reminds us of the writer's scrupulous and generous mind, presenting ideas that continue to resonate today...[it] offers a glimpse into the writer's personal life as well as into his intellectual relationships with such vital 20th-century thinkers as David Riesman, Saul Alinsky, Leo Lowenthal, Harvey Swados and Dan Wakefield... One of the great discoveries included in the book is Mills's FBI file, which was started after he wrote the bestselling Listen, Yankee :1960), a defense of the Cuban revolution. This file, which documents a possible assassination attempt on Mills in response to the book, is a chilling reminder of the hostility faced by liberal intellectuals in the 1950.

Tariq Ali

In that unlovely decade, the 1950's, the figure of C. Wright Mills swept across cold-war America like a meteor....This collection of letters, skillfully assembled by his daughters, are alternately prosaic and lyrical, comic and tragic, the fragments of a prematurely truncated life....In his introduction to this collection, Dan Wakefield, a former student who became a close friend, writes movingly of Mills' artistic qualities.

John B. Judis

The anxious, conformist 1950's, it now appears, were a high-water mark in American social criticism ‹ from David Riesman, William F. Buckley Jr. and Dwight Macdonald to James Baldwin, Paul Goodman and, of course, C. Wright Mills. . . . Mills's view of his work as art and literature probably helped him to attain a certan objectivity even in the midst of his indignation.

Nation

A beautifully edited volume, [...Mills's] letters and autobiographical compositions show a consistent, sincere sense of his role as a redeemer of lost ideals...

In These Times

The letters are at their best displaying Mills' outsize personality. Almost every page conveys energy, vitality, immense animal spirits.

Publishers Weekly

The U.S. intellectual and political world was jolted in 1962, when famed progressive political commentator and sociologist C. Wright Mills died of a heart attack at age 45. This collection of Mills's selected letters and shorter unpublished or uncollected writings reminds us of the writer's scrupulous and generous mind, presenting ideas that continue to resonate today. Edited by his daughters, the collection offers a glimpse into the writer's personal life as well as into his intellectual relationships with such vital 20th-century thinkers as David Riesman, Saul Alinsky, Leo Lowenthal, Harvey Swados and Dan Wakefield (who wrote the introduction to the book). Most illuminating are Mills's "letters" to "Tovarich," an imaginary friend in the Soviet Union, to whom he muses on American politics and the state of the world. He occasionally demonstrates his na vet , as when he writes about race relations in the U.S., but his insights are keen when he writes about university life and McCarthyism. One of the great discoveries included in the book is Mills's FBI file, which was started after he wrote the bestselling Listen, Yankee (1960), a defense of the Cuban revolution. This file, which documents a possible assassination attempt on Mills in response to the book, is a chilling reminder of the hostility faced by liberal intellectuals in the 1950s. (May) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Library Journal

This book marks an important contribution to our understanding of the provocative work of eminent sociologist Mills, author of White Collar, The Power Elite, and The Sociological Imagination. Mills, who left a lasting impression on his Columbia University students (including author Dan Wakefield, who provides an introduction to this volume), challenged the status quo and anticipated the societal struggles of the 1960s (and beyond) in his energetic but all-too-brief life (he died in 1962 at the age of 45). Here Mills's daughters have selected some 150 letters Mills wrote to distinguished thinkers of his day. They create a fascinating picture of a passionate intellectual at work. Early letters to his family anticipate Mills's future directions. "So I am learning American history in order to quote it at the sons of bitches who run American Big Business," he wrote his parents in 1942. The editors' descriptions of the contexts of many letters,a chronology of Mills's life, and notes on correspondents enrich this volume. Highly recommended for both public and academic libraries.--Ellen Gilbert, Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2001
Publisher
University of California Press
Pages
406
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780520232099

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