-WV t W7ook;'ow, Jesus and the Viennwse Exegete THE MIDWEST Thomas Woodraw Wilson: A Psy- chological Study, by Sigmund Freud and William C. Bullitt. Houghton Mifflin Company. $6.00. This psychological s t u d y of Woodrow Wilson fails for two rea- sons. First of all, Freud's axioms are highly questionable, especial ly when used to reduce the complexi- ties of a mind burdened with con- siderations of international politics to a simple tug-of-war among ego, id, and super-ego. Secondly, the au- thors are unable to disentangle their own hostilities to Wilson. As a result bitterness pervades the work. and its objectivity must be chal- lenged. Whether or not the authors are attempting an historical study, their method, coupled with their thinly disguised distaste for Wilson forces us to question or even negate their conclusions. One would expect S i g m u n d Freud to be objective. Bullitt, in his foreward, describes him as "a man of ruthless intellectual integrity." ("Ruthless" is the key word here.) Yet Freud. the self-acclaimed un- prejudiced inquirer, pettily con- demns Wilson for destroying Euro- pean culture by acceding to the de- mands of the Allies during the peace conference. Freud and Bullitt unceasingly lambaste Wilson with "ruthless intellectual integrity." Such judgements constitute neither an historian's interpretation nor a psychoanalyst's evaluation: they are rather the condemnations of an an- tagonized acquaintance and have no place in a study by Sigmund Freud. The venom of William Bullitt is frustrating for one who expects new insrihts from an intimate of Wilson during the Versailles fiasco. The character of his regard for Wilson is established early in the digest of facts from childhood and youth. His preoccupation with the nickname "Tommy" lasts throughout the book; indeed, he refers to Woodrow Wilson as "Tommy" even during his Presidency. (Incidentally, Wil- son dropped the name "Thomas" in his twenties; Freud interprets this act as mother identification, as Woodrow was his mother's maiden name.) This annoying detail is not significant in itself; but considered with the rest of Bulltt's bitter prose, it reveals a disgusting antipa- thy. From the style of this section, Bullitt's contributions to the rest of the chapters are easily identified: Whenever he indulges in phycho analytic procedure, he slings Freud's lingo like a parrot mocking a skilled Wilson's reason. Freud's. famous 6 4 Gy o , elocutionist. One wonders if Freud became the co-author of this book in order to analyze Bullitt through the perspective of Bullitt's father figure, Woodrow Wilson. Freud's analysis of Wilson is comprehensive: every fact present- ed in the book fits perfectly into the definition of the man's psychic con- stitution. Beginning with his basic assumptions about the subconscious and libidinal economics, Freud dis- cusses the importance of Wilson's minister father, the resolution of his Oedipus complex and the re- sulting repressions, identifications, and sublimations. The analysis is consistent and precise within the, limitations of information available on Wilson. From this "limited" analysis, the authors conclude that Wilson satis- factorily resolved his Oedipus con- flict and encountered normal rela- tions with women (whew!), although little libido was needed for the pur- suit of his sexual gratification or mother identification. They further resolve that a significant portion of his libido was centered in Narcis- sism and that an inordinately large portion of libidinal energy was con- centrated in passivity to his father. This last conclusion is particularly relevant for Freud and Bullitt, since they use it repeatedly to ex- plain Wilson's inconsistent behavior and relationships with other men. Passivity to his father resulted in Wilson's identification with Jesus Christ, and a contradictory tenden- cy, activity to the father, resulted in his identification with -God. So Woodrow Wilson, throughout most of his life, was in his subconscious both God and Jesus Christ. These unusually strong identifi- cations are, for the authors, the most important causes, perhaps the only causes, of Wilson's fame, of his eventual disgrace and mental col- lapse, of the United States' delay in entering the World War, of Wil- son's failure at Versailles, of his dif- ficulties as President of Princeton, of his weird love-hate relationships with younger men, of his hate rela- tionships with older men, and, final- ly, of his indigestion. This is quite a comprehensive set of causes. While Freud's system may ex- plain many of these incidents, one wonders about the relegation of Wilson's rationality to a position where it is solely controlled by his subconscious. Indeed the manner in which the un- conscious employs the conscious portion of the mind as a tool to carry out the wishes of the libido, using reason to find excuses to jus- tify actions desired by the uncon- scious, has rarely been more vivid- ly illustrated than by the argu- ments Wilson used... . Facts ceased to exist for him if they conflicted with his unconscious desires. This statement is repeated in stronger terms when the authors discuss Wilson and the Treaty of Versailles. Certainly, from the facts about Versailles presented in the book they feel justified in ignoring comparison of the mind to an ice- berg seems ominous in view of Wil- son's contradictory statements dur- ing the conference. But to ignore man's reason in favor of a facile ex- planation is extremuely dangerous when one considers the relevance of reason in making a decision based on political reality. Granted, in the context of the facts, Wilson did rot appear overly rational: but to brush aside his rationalizations and seek solutions in the conflicts between ego and id completely obliterates the perspective of reality, the de- mands forced upon the man by sit- uation. Was Wilson capable o" dealing with the reality of Ver- sailles? Freud believes he was not because of the turmoil in his sub- conscious. But what case can be made for the confusion of an over- whelming number of details and perhaps Wilson's intellectual inca- pability for ordering them? What. about the lack of sufficient facts for determining the situation historical- ly? These points are best illustrated by another incident in Wilson's life, the entrance of the United States into the war. Freud claims that Wil- son's indecision was rooted in his identification with Christ: he want- ed to be the Savior of mankind and could not satisfy this subconscious wish if he committed the United States at a time when an "evil peace" was inevitable. His identifi- cation with God would also be chal- lenged if he could not dictate terms of lasting peace to his "flock." Again, this preoccupation with sub- conscious motives led Freud to neg- lect the fact that Wilson was tor- tured by a huge moral burden: to "sentence our young men to death" and "insure the destruction of bil- lions of dollars worth of capital" for a war which would end in an "evil peace" and almost certainly result in continued warfare and entangle- ment for both Europe and the Unit- ed States was beyond his compre- hension. Wilson regarded, perhaps justly, the motives of both the Al- lies and the Central Powers with disgust. That he should enter a war on either side under conditions which would inevitably lead to an- other war was a reality which he , recognized and, however inconsis- tently, sought to alter by negotia- tion with both sides. But Freud and Bullitt insist that his agony was produced by subconscious identifi- cations and not by a rationalization of the morality of the situation. For them God and Jesus Christ dictated terms to Wilson's reason, not the realities of an ugly war resulting in an ugly peace. Ted Krontiris Mr. Krontiris is a third-vear student majoring in mathematics at The Univer- sity of Chicago. Vol 4, No. 3 And Sometimes the Twain Shall M4 Two Views, by Uwe Johnson, trans- lated by Richard and Clara Win- ston. McGraw-Hill Book Company. $4.50. For centuries, the literature of Germany has been driven by an in- tellectuality at once dynamic and entirely isolated from social activi- ty. There were, of course, the same soggy masterpieces of popular cul- ture. written by the Teutonic equiv- alents of Richardson and Sir Walter Scott. But Germany has always had profound reverence for the scholar, an awe for his very towering dis- tance from earthly concerns, un- matched in Europe or the United States. Here, where scholars are canonized only for their pragmatic contributions - sanctified in the glow of the second-stage rocket - it is difficult to conceive of an au- thor as both esthete and culture- hero. But the contrary is true of Germany, and for this reason -the metaphysical has often outweighed the physical in German literature. Nietzsche. Mann and Rilke: these are masters of a form which rejects both the mundanitY of extreme na- t u r a l i s m and the uncontrolled dreaming of 'surrealism. Instead, then have created a literature of' vivid complexity and universal hu- manity. Even in Brecht. the revolu- tionary, we see an uberwelt of alle- gory. while contemporary German poets have been described as "find- ing reality only in the synthetic process of artistic creation." But the novel in post-war Ger- many has notcontinued in the steps of such visionary authors as Her- mann Hesse. The Marshall Plan seems rather to have affected more than the reconstruction of an econo- my. If Uwe Johnson's latest novel, Two Views, may be considered an adequate representative, we may look for refractions of our own im- age in current German literature. There is the same highly profession- al control of technique, which wide- ly skirts the line dividing genius from insanity. There is total lack of daring in questions of form, and psychological insight is zealous- ly revealed without becoming re- vealing. For most readers, the book will be at fault for its lack of contempor- arv interest. The dramatic core of the novel is the erection of the Ber- lin wall - a drama which has al- ready been re-enacted in every setting is Ea the author's real unity c by political is forcibly d distinction and commun inception of which the a tomatically Friedrichsha And withou the geograp of automatic Part of this arises from -after all, hardly be e: romance of s ten. The pul come the p map of Berl of Johnson's reader who cover every (contin TAB L Aesthetics: Forms an Arts, b Biography: h o mas Sigmund C. Bull Fiction: loons Jordan i D~igginxgo son The Ravi$ M~arguer The Riot. Sauve Qu Durrell Two View T'he Wom Fox. by History: History of League, land Letters: Letters o by W. Il Paperback Social Com Studs 'f FFEABYV REVIEII form from poem to puppet extrava- ganza. Even in Germany itself, the wall has lost much of its tragic fas- cination. The most serious reading and the most heated discussion now centers on Karl Jaspers, the pioneer existentialist, and his study of the growth of neo-Nazism. International tension is aroused by this newly Prussian aspect in West German politics; the world has a raw memo- ry of what a truly potent Germany could do. Against this emotional back- ground, Uwe Johnson has trouble arousing much of the proper sympa- thy. This would cause no problem if the occasion of the novel were merely that - a means of launch- ing the narrative. But Two Views depends greatly upon the fear and pity which the Berlin construction once evoked. The building of the wall is the motivating force behind complete transformations of charac- ter -it is the power which defines the separate "views" of the book's title. But the wall is vaguely de- fined throughout the novel. The au- thor relies on the audience's memo- ry of horror-and this modern memory is a battleground for far too many horrors. Two Views is a novel saturated with place as well as situation; this too is neither explained nor tran- scended. Street names, are contin- ually dropped before the reader. without further illumination. In the early stages of the book, before the imprisonment of the East Germans, it is difficult to know whether the A Prophet Newfield 12 MIDWEST LITERARY REVIEW 0 February, 1967