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{{short description|American historian}}
'''Henry Stuart Hughes''' (May 16, 1916 in [[New York City]] – October 21, 1999 in [[La Jolla, California]]) was an [[United States|American]] [[historian]], [[professor]], and [[activism|activist]]. He advocated the application of [[psychoanalysis]] to history.

{{Infobox academic
| name = H. Stuart Hughes
| image =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name = Henry Stuart Hughes
| birth_date = {{birth date|1916|05|16}}
| birth_place = [[New York City]], [[New York (state)|New York]], US
| death_date = {{death date and age|1999|10|21|1916|05|16}}
| death_place = [[San Diego]], [[California]], US
| residence =
| spouse = {{unbulleted list | {{marriage|Suzanne Rufenacht|1950|1963|end=div}} | {{marriage|Judy Hughes|1964}}}}
| parents = [[Charles Evans Hughes Jr.]]
| awards = <!--notable national-level awards only-->
| alma_mater = {{unbulleted list | [[Amherst College]] | [[Harvard University]]}}
| thesis_title = The Crisis of the Imperial French Economy, 1810–1812
| thesis_year = 1940
| school_tradition =
| doctoral_advisor =
| academic_advisors =
| influences = [[A.&nbsp;L. Kroeber]]<ref>{{cite book |last=Gilkeson |first=John S. |year=2010 |title=Anthropologists and the Rediscovery of America, 1886–1965 |url=https://archive.org/details/anthropologistsr00gilk |url-access=limited |location=New York |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=[https://archive.org/details/anthropologistsr00gilk/page/n225 217] |doi=10.1017/CBO9780511779558 |isbn=978-1-139-49118-1}}</ref>
| era =
| discipline = History
| sub_discipline = <!--academic discipline specialist area – e.g. Sub-atomic research, 20th Century Danish specialist, Pauline research, Arcadian and Ugaritic specialist-->
| workplaces = {{unbulleted list | [[Brown University]] | [[Harvard University]] | [[Stanford University]] | [[University of California, San Diego]]}}
| doctoral_students = [[Martin Jay]]
| notable_students = <!--only those with WP articles-->
| main_interests =
| notable_works =
| notable_ideas =
| influenced = <!--must be referenced from a third-party source-->
| signature =
| signature_alt =
}}
'''Henry Stuart Hughes''' (1916–1999) was an American [[historian]], [[professor]], and [[activism|activist]]. He advocated the application of [[psychoanalysis]] to history.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Hughes was the grandson of [[Chief Justice of the United States]] [[Charles Evans Hughes]], the [[U.S. presidential election, 1916|1916]] [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] nominee for [[President of the United States|President]], and claimed in his memoirs to have been used as a "campaign baby" as an infant. His father left for [[World War I]] while Stuart was still an infant, returning a year later when his son was three.
Hughes was born on May 16, 1916, in [[New York City]], the son of Marjory Bruce Stuart and [[Charles Evans Hughes Jr.]] He was the grandson of [[Chief Justice of the United States]] [[Charles Evans Hughes]], the [[U.S. presidential election, 1916|1916]] [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] nominee for [[President of the United States|President]], and claimed in his memoirs to have been used as a "campaign baby" as an infant. His father left for [[World War I]] while Stuart was still an infant, returning a year later when his son was three. Stuart was his parents' second child and second son, born 14 months after his elder brother, [[Charles Evans Hughes III]]. Two daughters were born later.
Stuart was his parents' second child and second son, born 14 months after his elder brother, [[Charles Evans Hughes, III]]. Two daughters were born later.


In 1922, Hughes's family moved to [[suburban]] [[Riverdale, Bronx]], [[New York (state)|New York]], where he spent most of his boyhood.<ref>Eder, Richard. [https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/59994095.html?dids=59994095:59994095&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Dec+13%2C+1990&author=RICHARD+EDER&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=BOOK+REVIEW+Living+at+the+Low+End+of+the+Upper+Crust+GENTLEMAN+REBEL+The+Memoirs+of+H.+Stuart+Hughes.+Ticknor+%26+Fields%2C+%2424.95%2C+328+pages&pqatl=google "BOOK REVIEW Living at the Low End of the Upper Crust GENTLEMAN REBEL The Memoirs of H. Stuart Hughes."], ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', December 13, 1990. Accessed May 4, 2008. "Surely, that baked Henry Stuart into the upper crust. Perhaps, the bottom of the upper crust, he muses. But then there were the Kennedys; much richer, and beginning to be more powerful. When Joseph P. Kennedy moved from Riverdale to greater things, the Hugheses thriftily bought his house. Yet they—the Hugheses—were received by Hudson River Society; the Kennedys were not."</ref> This was interrupted in early 1929, when Hughes's father, [[Charles Evans Hughes, Jr.]], was appointed [[United States Solicitor General]] by the new President, [[Herbert Hoover]]. The family's stay in [[Washington, D.C.]], was relatively brief; Charles Hughes, Jr. was compelled to resign as Solicitor General when his father was appointed [[Chief Justice of the United States]] upon the death of [[William Howard Taft]] in 1930. He moved his family back to New York. Stuart was soon sent to [[boarding school]] at [[Deerfield Academy]]. He then attended [[Amherst College]] from 1933 to 1937. While in college, Hughes spent two summers in [[Germany]] in summer study programs, which were to serve him in good stead later.
In 1922, Hughes's family moved to [[suburban]] [[Riverdale, Bronx]], [[New York (state)|New York]], where he spent most of his childhood.<ref>Eder, Richard. [https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/59994095.html?dids=59994095:59994095&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Dec+13%2C+1990&author=RICHARD+EDER&pub=Los+Angeles+Times+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=BOOK+REVIEW+Living+at+the+Low+End+of+the+Upper+Crust+GENTLEMAN+REBEL+The+Memoirs+of+H.+Stuart+Hughes.+Ticknor+%26+Fields%2C+%2424.95%2C+328+pages&pqatl=google "BOOK REVIEW Living at the Low End of the Upper Crust GENTLEMAN REBEL The Memoirs of H. Stuart Hughes."], ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', December 13, 1990. Accessed May 4, 2008. "Surely, that baked Henry Stuart into the upper crust. Perhaps, the bottom of the upper crust, he muses. But then there were the Kennedys; much richer, and beginning to be more powerful. When Joseph P. Kennedy moved from Riverdale to greater things, the Hugheses thriftily bought his house. Yet they—the Hugheses—were received by Hudson River Society; the Kennedys were not."</ref> This was interrupted in early 1929, when Hughes's father was appointed [[United States Solicitor General]] by the new President, [[Herbert Hoover]]. The family's stay in [[Washington, D.C.]], was relatively brief; Charles Hughes Jr. was compelled to resign as Solicitor General when his father was appointed [[Chief Justice of the United States]] upon the death of [[William Howard Taft]] in 1930. He moved his family back to New York. Stuart was soon sent to [[boarding school]] at [[Deerfield Academy]]. He then attended [[Amherst College]] from 1933 to 1937. While in college, Hughes spent two summers in [[Germany]] in summer study programs, which were to serve him in good stead later.


==Early career==
==Early career==
Hughes then attended [[graduate school]] at [[Harvard University]], where he wrote his thesis, "The Crisis of the Imperial French Economy, 1810–1812." He was in Paris working on his thesis when [[World War II]] started on September 1, 1939. Hughes soon returned to Cambridge.
Hughes then attended [[graduate school]] at [[Harvard University]], where he wrote his thesis, ''The Crisis of the Imperial French Economy, 1810–1812''. He was in Paris working on his thesis when [[World War II]] started on September 1, 1939. Hughes soon returned to Cambridge.


With his new [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]], Hughes was appointed a junior faculty member at [[Brown University]]. He remained there only briefly before enlisting in the [[United States Army]] as a private. The Army soon recognized that a historian who was fluent in [[French language|French]] and [[German language|German]] would be of more use in [[military intelligence]] than in the [[field artillery]]. Soon after the attack on [[Attack on Pearl Harbor|Pearl Harbor]], he was commissioned as an officer, initially as a [[second lieutenant#United States|second lieutenant]]) in what was soon to become the [[Office of Strategic Services]]. During the war, he served as an intelligence analyst whose work was generally well received, despite his association with political views that were, especially in the context of the United States military establishment of the time, decidedly [[left-wing politics|left-wing]].
With his new [[Doctor of Philosophy|PhD]], Hughes was appointed a junior faculty member at [[Brown University]]. He remained there only briefly before enlisting in the [[United States Army]] as a private. The army soon recognized that a historian who was fluent in French and German would be of more use in [[military intelligence]] than in the [[field artillery]]. Soon after the [[attack on Pearl Harbor]], he was commissioned as an officer, initially as a [[second lieutenant#United States|second lieutenant]], in what was soon to become the [[Office of Strategic Services]]. During the war, he served as an intelligence analyst whose work was generally well received, despite his association with political views that were, especially in the context of the United States military establishment of the time, decidedly [[left-wing politics|left wing]].


Hughes, by then a [[Lieutenant colonel (United States)|lieutenant colonel]], was honorably discharged from active duty in 1946 and was soon reassigned as a civilian intelligence analyst, returning to Europe. In this role, he befriended the pioneering [[Black people|black]] [[United States Department of State|State Department]] official [[Ralph Bunche]]. In the State Department, Hughes bemoaned the rise of the [[Cold War]] mentality. In late 1947, he left to return to Harvard as an instructor and as the associate director of its new [[Russia]]n Research Center. However, Hughes felt that he unwittingly sabotaged his career there by his early support for former [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]] [[Henry A. Wallace|Henry Wallace]] for President in [[U.S. presidential election, 1948|1948]]. In 1950, Hughes married Suzanne Rufenacht, a member of a wealthy and influential [[France|French]] [[Protestantism|Protestant]] family. Failing to be published as a historian at a level sufficient to allow him to be promoted at Harvard at that time, and somewhat ostracized for his activism, Hughes left Harvard for [[Stanford University]] in 1952, at the height of the [[Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy]] era.
Hughes, by then a [[Lieutenant colonel (United States)|lieutenant colonel]], was honorably discharged from active duty in 1946 and was soon reassigned as a civilian intelligence analyst, returning to Europe. In this role, he befriended the pioneering [[Black people|black]] [[United States Department of State|State Department]] official [[Ralph Bunche]]. In the State Department, Hughes bemoaned the rise of the [[Cold War]] mentality. In late 1947, he left to return to Harvard as an instructor and as the associate director of its new [[Russia]]n Research Center. However, Hughes felt that he unwittingly sabotaged his career there by his early support for former [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]] [[Henry A. Wallace|Henry Wallace]] for President in [[U.S. presidential election, 1948|1948]]. In 1950, Hughes married Suzanne Rufenacht, a member of a wealthy and influential [[France|French]] [[Protestantism|Protestant]] family. Failing to be published as a historian at a level sufficient to allow him to be promoted at Harvard at that time, and somewhat ostracized for his activism, Hughes left Harvard for [[Stanford University]] in 1952, at the height of the [[Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy]] era.


==Acclaim and activism==
==Acclaim and activism==
While in [[California]], Hughes published at a level sufficient to encourage Harvard to recall him, in 1957. During his second stay at Harvard, Hughes became involved with [[Peace Action|SANE]] (then the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, now Peace Action). Early in this period, he also engaged in a series of debates with a young Harvard professor of government, [[Henry Kissinger]]. In [[United States Senate special election in Massachusetts, 1962|1962]], Hughes filed as an independent candidate for the final two years of the unexpired [[United States Senate|U.S. Senate]] term of President [[John F. Kennedy]]. The major-party candidates were the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] members [[Edward M. Kennedy]] (the President's youngest brother) and [[Edward J. McCormack, Jr.|Eddie McCormack]] (a nephew of the [[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives|Speaker of the House]]) and the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] [[George C. Lodge]]. Hughes collected well over the 72,000 signatures then required under Massachusetts law for placement on the ballot as an independent candidate; the September Democratic [[primary election|primary]] eliminated McCormack from further contention.
While in [[California]], Hughes published at a level sufficient to encourage Harvard to recall him, in 1957. During his second stay at Harvard, Hughes became involved with [[Peace Action|SANE]] (then the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, now Peace Action). Early in this period, he also engaged in a series of debates with a young Harvard professor of government, [[Henry Kissinger]]. In [[United States Senate special election in Massachusetts, 1962|1962]], Hughes filed as an independent candidate for the final two years of the unexpired [[United States Senate|US Senate]] term of President [[John F. Kennedy]]. The major-party candidates were the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] members [[Edward M. Kennedy]] (the President's youngest brother) and [[Edward J. McCormack, Jr.|Eddie McCormack]] (a nephew of the [[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives|Speaker of the House]]) and the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] [[George C. Lodge]]. Hughes collected well over the 72,000 signatures then required under Massachusetts law for placement on the ballot as an independent candidate; the September Democratic [[primary election|primary]] eliminated McCormack from further contention.


For most of the campaign, Hughes was taken seriously, even engaging in two televised debates with Lodge. (Kennedy, by then an overwhelming favorite, declined to participate.) Any chance that Hughes might have had of winning the election or even receiving widespread support was destroyed in the aftermath of the [[Cuban Missile crisis]], only weeks before the election, in which the President and his brother [[Robert F. Kennedy]] took the nation "to the brink" of nuclear confrontation with the [[Soviet Union]]. A candidate favoring [[nuclear disarmament]] suddenly seemed unrealistic and out of touch; Hughes received less than two per cent of the vote and far fewer votes than he previously had signatures. Edward M. Kennedy won the election resoundingly and served in the seat until his death in 2009.
For most of the campaign, Hughes was taken seriously, even engaging in two televised debates with Lodge. (Kennedy, by then an overwhelming favorite, declined to participate.) Any chance that Hughes might have had of winning the election or even receiving widespread support was destroyed in the aftermath of the [[Cuban Missile Crisis]], only weeks before the election, in which the President and his brother [[Robert F. Kennedy]] took the nation "to the brink" of nuclear confrontation with the [[Soviet Union]]. A candidate favoring [[nuclear disarmament]] suddenly seemed unrealistic and out of touch; Hughes received less than two per cent of the vote and far fewer votes than he previously had signatures. Edward M. Kennedy won the election resoundingly and served in the seat until his death in 2009.


== Support of psychoanalysis and psychohistory ==
== Support of psychoanalysis and psychohistory ==
As a beneficiary of it, Hughes saw the value of [[psychoanalysis]]. His widow, Judith Hughes, is a European historian and psychoanalyst. In the words of his wife, he "could not have lived the life he did, at least the last 40-plus years of it, without benefit of psychoanalysis."<ref>November 1999 telephone communication with Paul Elovitz, editor of ''Clio's Psyche''.</ref>
As a beneficiary of it, Hughes saw the value of [[psychoanalysis]]. His widow, Judith Hughes, is a European historian and psychoanalyst. In the words of his wife, he "could not have lived the life he did, at least the last 40-plus years of it, without benefit of psychoanalysis."<ref>November 1999 telephone communication with Paul Elovitz, editor of ''[[Clio's Psyche]]''.</ref>


As a historian Hughes saw enormous value of the [[Freudian]] world view applied to history. In ''Gentleman Rebel'' he reported being close to his Harvard colleague [[Erik Erikson]] and serving in the "supporting cast" of psychohistory.<ref>Hughes, ''Gentleman Rebel'', p. 237.</ref> When Richard Schoenwald established the first [[psychohistory]] newsletter (the predecessor to ''The Psychohistory Review''), Hughes made serious contributions and encouraged the new and bold direction of the publication.
As a historian Hughes saw enormous value of the [[Freudian]] world view applied to history. In ''Gentleman Rebel'' he reported being close to his Harvard colleague [[Erik Erikson]] and serving in the "supporting cast" of psychohistory.<ref>Hughes, ''Gentleman Rebel'', p. 237.</ref> When Richard Schoenwald established the first [[psychohistory]] newsletter (the predecessor to ''The Psychohistory Review''), Hughes made serious contributions and encouraged the new and bold direction of the publication.
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==Later career==
==Later career==
Early in 1963, Hughes and Suzanne filed for divorce. In the fall of 1963, Hughes agreed to become co-chairman of the SANE organization, alongside renowned [[pediatrics|pediatrician]] and fellow activist Dr. [[Benjamin Spock]]. In March 1964, Hughes married his second wife, Judy, whom he initially had met as one of his graduate school students. As SANE expanded its anti-nuclear activities to include anti-[[Vietnam War]] activism, Hughes was branded by the State Department's Passport Office as a potential subversive. He also found himself in an increasingly isolated position on the Harvard faculty, opposed to both the Vietnam War and also many of the actions that began to be taken in opposition to it. Hughes, however, served as the sole chairman of SANE from 1967 to 1970 after Spock resigned his co-chairmanship.
Early in 1963, Hughes and Suzanne filed for divorce. In the fall of 1963, Hughes agreed to become co-chairman of the SANE organization, alongside renowned [[pediatrics|pediatrician]] and fellow activist [[Benjamin Spock]]. In March 1964, Hughes married his second wife, Judy, whom he initially had met as one of his graduate school students. As SANE expanded its anti-nuclear activities to include anti-[[Vietnam War]] activism, Hughes was branded by the State Department's Passport Office as a potential subversive. He also found himself in an increasingly isolated position on the Harvard faculty, opposed to both the Vietnam War and also many of the actions that began to be taken in opposition to it. Hughes, however, served as the sole chairman of SANE from 1967 to 1970 after Spock resigned his co-chairmanship.


Hughes also became associated with male support for [[feminism]]. In part, this seems to have been prompted by his perception of academic discrimination against his wife after she had earned her own doctorate. It was this discrimination that, in large measure, seems to have led to the Hughes' departure from Harvard for the [[University of California at San Diego]]; unlike his first departure from Harvard, it could not now be linked to any failure to have been sufficiently published. They moved to [[San Diego, California|San Diego]] in 1975; Hughes taught at UCSD until taking [[emeritus]] status in 1989 and died in [[La Jolla]], a section of San Diego and site of the UCSD campus, following a protracted illness, in 1999.
Hughes also became associated with male support for [[feminism]]. In part, this seems to have been prompted by his perception of academic discrimination against his wife after she had earned her own doctorate. It was this discrimination that, in large measure, seems to have led to the Hugheses' departure from Harvard for the [[University of California at San Diego]]; unlike his first departure from Harvard, it could not now be linked to any failure to have been sufficiently published. They moved to [[San Diego, California|San Diego]] in 1975; Hughes taught at UCSD until taking [[emeritus]] status in 1989 and died in [[La Jolla]], a section of San Diego and site of the UCSD campus, following a protracted illness, on October 21, 1999.


==Books by H. Stuart Hughes==
==Books by H. Stuart Hughes==
*''An Essay for Our Times'', 1950. {{ISBN|0-374-94032-0}}.
*''An Essay for Our Times'', New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1950. {{ISBN|0-374-94032-0}}.
*''Oswald Spengler: A Critical Estimate'', 1952. {{ISBN|0-8371-8214-X}}.
*''Oswald Spengler: A Critical Estimate'', New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1952. {{ISBN|0-8371-8214-X}}.
*''The United States and Italy''. Cambridge: Harvard Press, 1953. {{ISBN|0-674-92545-9}}.
*''The United States and Italy''. Cambridge: Harvard Press, 1953. {{ISBN|0-674-92545-9}}.
*''Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought''. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958. {{ISBN|0-674-70728-1}}.
*''Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought''. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958. {{ISBN|0-674-70728-1}}.
*''Contemporary Europe: A History''. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1961. {{ISBN|0-13-291840-4}}.
*''Contemporary Europe: A History''. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1961. {{ISBN|0-13-291840-4}}.
*''An Approach to Peace, and Other Essays''. Atheneum, 1962. [[Amazon Standard Identification Number|ASIN]] B0007DFG2V.
*''An Approach to Peace, and Other Essays''. Atheneum, 1962. [[Amazon Standard Identification Number|ASIN]] B0007DFG2V.
*''History as Art and Science: Twin Vistas on the Past'', 1964.
*''History as Art and as Science: Twin Vistas on the Past'', New York: Harper & Row, 1964.
*''The Obstructed Path: French Social Thought in the Years of Desperation 1930-1960'', 1968.
*''The Obstructed Path: French Social Thought in the Years of Desperation 1930-1960'', New York: Harper & Row, 1968.
*''The Sea Change: The Migration of Social Thought, 1930-1965'', 1975.
*''The Sea Change: The Migration of Social Thought, 1930-1965'', New York: Harper & Row, 1975.
*''Prisoners of Hope: The Silver Age of the Italian Jews, 1924–1974''. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983. {{ISBN|0-674-70727-3}}.
*''Prisoners of Hope: The Silver Age of the Italian Jews, 1924–1974''. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983. {{ISBN|0-674-70727-3}}.
*''Between Commitment and Disillusion'', 1987, comprising two earlier works (and with a new introduction):
*''Between Commitment and Disillusion'', 1987, comprising two earlier works (and with a new introduction):
: ''The Obstructed Path'', 1968, and ''The Sea Change'', 1975; Wesleyan University Press, 1987 {{ISBN|0-8195-5136-8}} [hc], 0-8195-6193-2 [pb].
: ''The Obstructed Path'', 1968, and ''The Sea Change'', 1975; Wesleyan University Press, 1987 {{ISBN|0-8195-5136-8}} [hc], 0-8195-6193-2 [pb].
*''Sophisticated Rebels: The Political Culture of European Dissent, 1968–1987'', 1988. {{ISBN|0-674-82130-0}}.
*''Sophisticated Rebels: The Political Culture of European Dissent, 1968–1987'', Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988. {{ISBN|0-674-82130-0}}.
*''Gentleman Rebel'', New York: Tichnor & Fields, 1990. {{ISBN|0-395-56316-X}}. A memoir.
*''Gentleman Rebel: The Memoirs of H. Stuart Hughes'', New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1990. {{ISBN|0-395-56316-X}}. A memoir.


<small>Note: ISBNs referenced are to editions currently available and may not be the same as the ISBNs assigned to the first editions of his works.</small>
<small>Note: ISBNs referenced are to editions currently available and may not be the same as the ISBNs assigned to the first editions of his works.</small>
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;Sources
;Sources
{{Portal|United States Army|New York}}
*''Harvard Magazine'', November–December 2004
*''Harvard Magazine'', November–December 2004
*Cohen, Joel I. ''Hughes for Senate, 1962: A campaign history'' (ASIN B007EVEIG)
*Cohen, Joel I. ''Hughes for Senate, 1962: A campaign history'' (ASIN B007EVEIG)


==External links==
*[http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1446 Henry Stuart Hughes Papers (MS 1446).] Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.
{{Portal bar|Biography|History|New York City}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


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[[Category:Harvard University faculty]]
[[Category:Harvard University faculty]]
[[Category:Stanford University Department of History faculty]]
[[Category:Stanford University Department of History faculty]]
[[Category:American army personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:United States Army personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:American anti-war activists]]
[[Category:American anti-war activists]]
[[Category:Guggenheim Fellows]]
[[Category:People from the Bronx]]
[[Category:People from the Bronx]]
[[Category:People from Riverdale, Bronx]]
[[Category:People from Riverdale, Bronx]]
[[Category:United States Army officers]]
[[Category:United States Army officers]]
[[Category:Deerfield Academy alumni]]
[[Category:Deerfield Academy alumni]]
[[Category:Male feminists]]
[[Category:American male feminists]]
[[Category:American feminists]]
[[Category:Massachusetts Independents]]
[[Category:Massachusetts Independents]]
[[Category:20th-century American historians]]
[[Category:20th-century American historians]]
[[Category:20th-century American male writers]]
[[Category:Activists from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Activists from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Activists from California]]
[[Category:Activists from California]]
[[Category:Historians from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Historians from New York (state)]]
[[Category:American male non-fiction writers]]
[[Category:Charles Evans Hughes family]]

Latest revision as of 04:25, 27 April 2024

H. Stuart Hughes
Born
Henry Stuart Hughes

(1916-05-16)May 16, 1916
DiedOctober 21, 1999(1999-10-21) (aged 83)
Spouses
  • Suzanne Rufenacht
    (m. 1950; div. 1963)
  • Judy Hughes
    (m. 1964)
ParentCharles Evans Hughes Jr.
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisThe Crisis of the Imperial French Economy, 1810–1812 (1940)
InfluencesA. L. Kroeber[1]
Academic work
DisciplineHistory
Institutions
Doctoral studentsMartin Jay

Henry Stuart Hughes (1916–1999) was an American historian, professor, and activist. He advocated the application of psychoanalysis to history.

Early life[edit]

Hughes was born on May 16, 1916, in New York City, the son of Marjory Bruce Stuart and Charles Evans Hughes Jr. He was the grandson of Chief Justice of the United States Charles Evans Hughes, the 1916 Republican Party nominee for President, and claimed in his memoirs to have been used as a "campaign baby" as an infant. His father left for World War I while Stuart was still an infant, returning a year later when his son was three. Stuart was his parents' second child and second son, born 14 months after his elder brother, Charles Evans Hughes III. Two daughters were born later.

In 1922, Hughes's family moved to suburban Riverdale, Bronx, New York, where he spent most of his childhood.[2] This was interrupted in early 1929, when Hughes's father was appointed United States Solicitor General by the new President, Herbert Hoover. The family's stay in Washington, D.C., was relatively brief; Charles Hughes Jr. was compelled to resign as Solicitor General when his father was appointed Chief Justice of the United States upon the death of William Howard Taft in 1930. He moved his family back to New York. Stuart was soon sent to boarding school at Deerfield Academy. He then attended Amherst College from 1933 to 1937. While in college, Hughes spent two summers in Germany in summer study programs, which were to serve him in good stead later.

Early career[edit]

Hughes then attended graduate school at Harvard University, where he wrote his thesis, The Crisis of the Imperial French Economy, 1810–1812. He was in Paris working on his thesis when World War II started on September 1, 1939. Hughes soon returned to Cambridge.

With his new PhD, Hughes was appointed a junior faculty member at Brown University. He remained there only briefly before enlisting in the United States Army as a private. The army soon recognized that a historian who was fluent in French and German would be of more use in military intelligence than in the field artillery. Soon after the attack on Pearl Harbor, he was commissioned as an officer, initially as a second lieutenant, in what was soon to become the Office of Strategic Services. During the war, he served as an intelligence analyst whose work was generally well received, despite his association with political views that were, especially in the context of the United States military establishment of the time, decidedly left wing.

Hughes, by then a lieutenant colonel, was honorably discharged from active duty in 1946 and was soon reassigned as a civilian intelligence analyst, returning to Europe. In this role, he befriended the pioneering black State Department official Ralph Bunche. In the State Department, Hughes bemoaned the rise of the Cold War mentality. In late 1947, he left to return to Harvard as an instructor and as the associate director of its new Russian Research Center. However, Hughes felt that he unwittingly sabotaged his career there by his early support for former Vice President Henry Wallace for President in 1948. In 1950, Hughes married Suzanne Rufenacht, a member of a wealthy and influential French Protestant family. Failing to be published as a historian at a level sufficient to allow him to be promoted at Harvard at that time, and somewhat ostracized for his activism, Hughes left Harvard for Stanford University in 1952, at the height of the McCarthy era.

Acclaim and activism[edit]

While in California, Hughes published at a level sufficient to encourage Harvard to recall him, in 1957. During his second stay at Harvard, Hughes became involved with SANE (then the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, now Peace Action). Early in this period, he also engaged in a series of debates with a young Harvard professor of government, Henry Kissinger. In 1962, Hughes filed as an independent candidate for the final two years of the unexpired US Senate term of President John F. Kennedy. The major-party candidates were the Democratic Party members Edward M. Kennedy (the President's youngest brother) and Eddie McCormack (a nephew of the Speaker of the House) and the Republican George C. Lodge. Hughes collected well over the 72,000 signatures then required under Massachusetts law for placement on the ballot as an independent candidate; the September Democratic primary eliminated McCormack from further contention.

For most of the campaign, Hughes was taken seriously, even engaging in two televised debates with Lodge. (Kennedy, by then an overwhelming favorite, declined to participate.) Any chance that Hughes might have had of winning the election or even receiving widespread support was destroyed in the aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis, only weeks before the election, in which the President and his brother Robert F. Kennedy took the nation "to the brink" of nuclear confrontation with the Soviet Union. A candidate favoring nuclear disarmament suddenly seemed unrealistic and out of touch; Hughes received less than two per cent of the vote and far fewer votes than he previously had signatures. Edward M. Kennedy won the election resoundingly and served in the seat until his death in 2009.

Support of psychoanalysis and psychohistory[edit]

As a beneficiary of it, Hughes saw the value of psychoanalysis. His widow, Judith Hughes, is a European historian and psychoanalyst. In the words of his wife, he "could not have lived the life he did, at least the last 40-plus years of it, without benefit of psychoanalysis."[3]

As a historian Hughes saw enormous value of the Freudian world view applied to history. In Gentleman Rebel he reported being close to his Harvard colleague Erik Erikson and serving in the "supporting cast" of psychohistory.[4] When Richard Schoenwald established the first psychohistory newsletter (the predecessor to The Psychohistory Review), Hughes made serious contributions and encouraged the new and bold direction of the publication.

An important bibliographer of psychohistory, William Gilmore, calls "History and Psychoanalysis: The Explanation of Motive," in Hughes' book, History as Art and as Science (1964), an indispensable "classic" and "must reading."[5] Hughes's memoirs are particularly revealing, as he does not begin his account with any mention of his distinguished family, but instead with a question from his psychoanalyst, Avery Weisman.

Later career[edit]

Early in 1963, Hughes and Suzanne filed for divorce. In the fall of 1963, Hughes agreed to become co-chairman of the SANE organization, alongside renowned pediatrician and fellow activist Benjamin Spock. In March 1964, Hughes married his second wife, Judy, whom he initially had met as one of his graduate school students. As SANE expanded its anti-nuclear activities to include anti-Vietnam War activism, Hughes was branded by the State Department's Passport Office as a potential subversive. He also found himself in an increasingly isolated position on the Harvard faculty, opposed to both the Vietnam War and also many of the actions that began to be taken in opposition to it. Hughes, however, served as the sole chairman of SANE from 1967 to 1970 after Spock resigned his co-chairmanship.

Hughes also became associated with male support for feminism. In part, this seems to have been prompted by his perception of academic discrimination against his wife after she had earned her own doctorate. It was this discrimination that, in large measure, seems to have led to the Hugheses' departure from Harvard for the University of California at San Diego; unlike his first departure from Harvard, it could not now be linked to any failure to have been sufficiently published. They moved to San Diego in 1975; Hughes taught at UCSD until taking emeritus status in 1989 and died in La Jolla, a section of San Diego and site of the UCSD campus, following a protracted illness, on October 21, 1999.

Books by H. Stuart Hughes[edit]

  • An Essay for Our Times, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1950. ISBN 0-374-94032-0.
  • Oswald Spengler: A Critical Estimate, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1952. ISBN 0-8371-8214-X.
  • The United States and Italy. Cambridge: Harvard Press, 1953. ISBN 0-674-92545-9.
  • Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958. ISBN 0-674-70728-1.
  • Contemporary Europe: A History. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1961. ISBN 0-13-291840-4.
  • An Approach to Peace, and Other Essays. Atheneum, 1962. ASIN B0007DFG2V.
  • History as Art and as Science: Twin Vistas on the Past, New York: Harper & Row, 1964.
  • The Obstructed Path: French Social Thought in the Years of Desperation 1930-1960, New York: Harper & Row, 1968.
  • The Sea Change: The Migration of Social Thought, 1930-1965, New York: Harper & Row, 1975.
  • Prisoners of Hope: The Silver Age of the Italian Jews, 1924–1974. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983. ISBN 0-674-70727-3.
  • Between Commitment and Disillusion, 1987, comprising two earlier works (and with a new introduction):
The Obstructed Path, 1968, and The Sea Change, 1975; Wesleyan University Press, 1987 ISBN 0-8195-5136-8 [hc], 0-8195-6193-2 [pb].
  • Sophisticated Rebels: The Political Culture of European Dissent, 1968–1987, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-674-82130-0.
  • Gentleman Rebel: The Memoirs of H. Stuart Hughes, New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1990. ISBN 0-395-56316-X. A memoir.

Note: ISBNs referenced are to editions currently available and may not be the same as the ISBNs assigned to the first editions of his works.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gilkeson, John S. (2010). Anthropologists and the Rediscovery of America, 1886–1965. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 217. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511779558. ISBN 978-1-139-49118-1.
  2. ^ Eder, Richard. "BOOK REVIEW Living at the Low End of the Upper Crust GENTLEMAN REBEL The Memoirs of H. Stuart Hughes.", Los Angeles Times, December 13, 1990. Accessed May 4, 2008. "Surely, that baked Henry Stuart into the upper crust. Perhaps, the bottom of the upper crust, he muses. But then there were the Kennedys; much richer, and beginning to be more powerful. When Joseph P. Kennedy moved from Riverdale to greater things, the Hugheses thriftily bought his house. Yet they—the Hugheses—were received by Hudson River Society; the Kennedys were not."
  3. ^ November 1999 telephone communication with Paul Elovitz, editor of Clio's Psyche.
  4. ^ Hughes, Gentleman Rebel, p. 237.
  5. ^ Gilmore, William (1984). Psychohistorical Inquiry: A Comprehensive Research Bibliography. p. 44.
Sources
  • Harvard Magazine, November–December 2004
  • Cohen, Joel I. Hughes for Senate, 1962: A campaign history (ASIN B007EVEIG)

External links[edit]