Peter Brooks (writer)

Peter Preston Brooks (born 1938) is an American literary scholar, interdisciplinary humanist, and writer known for his work on narrative theory, psychoanalysis and literature, melodrama, law and literature, and the institutional place of the humanities. Over a career spanning Yale University, the University of Virginia, and Princeton University, Brooks played an influential role in shaping comparative literature, narrative studies, and the institutional frameworks that support humanistic scholarship.

Brooks earned his A.B. from Harvard University and later returned to complete a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature after study in England and France. He also studied at University College, London (UCL) as a Marshall Scholar. He joined the Yale faculty, initially in French, later in Comparative Literature, during a period of disciplinary transformation. The French Department had become a major American entry point for structuralist and post-structuralist thought, bringing figures such as Claude Lévi-Strauss, Jacques Lacan, Roland Barthes, and later Jacques Derrida into Yale’s orbit.

Brooks participated in reshaping literary study around questions of language, narrative, theory, and interpretation, especially in the creation of The Literature Major, an interdisciplinary undergraduate program developed by younger faculty as an alternative to traditional national literature departmental and standard great-books pedagogy.

Working with colleagues such as Adam Parry, Michael Holquist, Peter Demetz, Geoffrey Hartman, and Paul de Man, Brooks helped establish courses—Lit X, Lit Y, and Lit Z—that foregrounded poetics, interpretation, textual analysis, and the theoretical underpinnings of literary study. While never aligned with a single theoretical orthodoxy, he advocated for intellectual pluralism within the program and resisted attempts to define it by the “Yale School” of deconstruction.