Charles MauronCharles Mauron (1899–1966) was a French translator of contemporary English authors, including E. M. Forster and Virginia Woolf, and a literary critic who made use of psychoanalytic literary criticism. He is noted for his books Aesthetics and Psychology (1935) and Des métaphores obsédantes au mythe personnel (1962). He was married from 1919 to 1949 to the writer Marie Mauron (1896-1986), and their home in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence became a focal-point in the inter-war years for their friends in the Bloomsbury Group.[1] BiographyCharles Mauron was born in 1899 in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, and attended the Lycée Thiers secondary school in Marseille.[2] He achieved a diplôme d'études supérieures in chemistry from Aix-Marseille University, however failing eyesight prevented him from performing laboratory work, leading him to pursue his personal passion of literature instead.[3] PsychocriticismIn 1963, Charles Mauron[4] conceived a structured method to interpret literary works via psychoanalysis. The study implied four different phases:
The author cannot be reduced to a ratiocinating self: his own more or less traumatic biographical past, the cultural archetypes that have suffused his "soul" ironically contrast with the conscious self, The chiasmic relation between the two tales may be seen as a sane and safe acting out. A basically unconscious sexual impulse is symbolically fulfilled in a positive and socially gratifying way, a process known as Sublimation. Notes
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