Hazel Barnes
Hazel E. Barnes | |
---|---|
![]() Barnes at her 92nd Birthday | |
Born | |
Died | March 18, 2008 | (aged 92)
Occupation(s) | Philosopher, translator |
Known for | English translator of Jean-Paul Sartre |
Hazel Estella Barnes (December 16, 1915 – March 18, 2008) was an American philosopher, author, and translator. Best known for her popularization of
Her autobiography, The Story I Tell Myself : A Venture in Existentialist Autobiography, was published in 1997.
Translation of Sartre's Being and Nothingness
Barnes recounts in her autobiography taking on the translation of Being and Nothingness unexpectedly. Writing to the main American publisher of existentialist writers with a book proposal on the general topic, Barnes received a reply that included an invitation to engage in the translation. She took the publishers up on the offer, thinking it might be a good way to familiarize herself with Sartre's thought. "I was quite casual about it all", she writes, "[never asking myself] whether with only three years of badly taught high school French and one yearlong course in college, and a bare minimum of background in philosophy, I was qualified to do the task."[4]
Partial bibliography
Original works
- The Literature of Possibility: a Study in Humanistic Existentialism (1959)
- Hippolytus In Drama And Myth (1960)
- An Existentialist Ethics (1967)
- The University as the New Church (1970)
- Sartre (1973)
- The Meddling Gods: Four Essays on Classical Themes (1974)
- Sartre and Flaubert (1981)
- The Story I Tell Myself : A Venture in Existentialist Autobiography (1997)
Translations
- Being and Nothingness (1956)
- Existential Psychoanalysis (1962)
- The Problem of Method(1963)
References
- University of BoulderNews, March 19, 2008
- ^ Hazel Barnes Prize
- ^ "The Boulder Psychotherapy Institute".
- ISBN 0-226-03732-0.
External links
- Hazel Barnes article at the Window.