Anne Bernays

Anne Bernays
Born (1930-09-14) September 14, 1930
New York City, New York, U.S.
Alma mater Barnard College
Occupation Novelist, editor, teacher
Spouse(s) Justin Kaplan
Children 3
Parent(s) Edward Bernays
Doris E. Fleischman
Relatives Sigmund Freud (paternal granduncle)

Anne Bernays (born September 14, 1930, in New York City, United States)[1] is an American novelist, editor, and teacher.

Life

Bernays attended the Brearley School on New York City's Upper East Side, graduating in 1948. A graduate of Barnard College,[1] she was managing editor of discovery, a literary magazine, before moving from New York City to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1959 when she began her career as a novelist.

Bernays has been published widely in national magazines and journals and is a long-time teacher of writing at Boston University, Boston College, Holy Cross, Harvard Extension, Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, and MFA Program at Lesley University.[2]

She is a founder of PEN/New England and a member of the Writer's Union. She serves as chairman of the board of Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown and co-president of Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill.

Family

Her father, Edward L. Bernays, was a nephew of Sigmund Freud and is known as "the father of Public Relations."[1] Bernays appeared in the Adam Curtis series The Century of the Self (2002) where she was critical of her father's shaky commitment to democracy and skill at manipulation. Her mother, Doris E. Fleischman, was a writer and feminist. She was married to the biographer and editor Justin Kaplan until his death in 2014; they lived in Cambridge,[3] and Truro, Massachusetts, and had three daughters and six grandchildren.[4]

Selected novels

She is co-author of three non-fiction books:

Reviews

The book ends in 1959, with Bernays and Kaplan, married and the parents of two small daughters, leaving Manhattan for Cambridge, Mass., he to work on a biography of Mark Twain, she to write her first novel. The New York they leave behind, one that New York itself had left behind, was something unmatchable anywhere in the world.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 16, 2008. Retrieved December 13, 2007.
  2. "Anne Bernays | Jewish Women's Archive". Jwa.org. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  3. "Anne Bernays speaker bio. at Forum Network". Archived from the original on March 5, 2012. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
  4. "Gotham When They Were Young". The New York Times. David Walton. June 9, 2002.

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