René Marill Albérès

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

René Marill Albérès, or R. M. Albérès, was the pseudonym of René Marill (10 March 1921 – 25 May 1982), a French writer and literary critic. He published book-length studies of

European literature.[1]

Life

René Marill Albérès was born on 10 March 1921 in Perpignan. He studied at the École normale supérieure and the Faculty of Letters in Paris. From 1946 to 1954 he taught at the Institut Français in Buenos Aires. From 1954 to 1962 he taught at the Institut français de Florence. From 1962 to 1969 he taught at the University of Fribourg, and from 1969 for the University of Orléans.[1]

In parallel with his academic career, Albérès was a journalist. He wrote for

La Disparition notoriously failed to notice the absence of the letter e
in the novel:

La Disparition is a raw, violent, and facile fiction. [...] The mystery remains entire, but the novel is finished; that is the contemporary form of "literary" detective fiction (as in Robbe-Grillet, though in a different style). Perec carries it off perfectly, in a book that is captivating and dramatic, but that gives off a strong shiff of artifice.[2]

He was a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour. He died on 25 May 1982 in Orléans.[1]

Works

  • Saint-Exupery, 1946
  • L'odyssée d'André Gide [The odyssey of André Gide], 1950
  • Gérard de Nerval, 1955
  • Bilan littéraire du XXe siècle [Literary review of the twentieth century], 1956
  • Esthétique et morale chez Jean Giraudoux [Aesthetics and morals in Jean Giraudoux], 1957.
  • L'aventure intellectuelle du XXe siècle; panorama des littératures européennes, 1900–1959 [The intellectual adventure of the twentieth century: a panorama of European literature], 1959
  • Jean-Paul Sartre: philosopher without faith, 1960. Translated by Wade Baskin.
  • 'Neo-Marxism and criticism of dialectical reasoning' in Edith Kern, ed., Sartre: a collection of critical essays, 1962
  • Histoire du roman moderne, [History of the modern novel], 1962
  • Michel Butor, 1964
  • Métamorphoses du roman [Metamorphoses of the novel], 1966
  • (with Pierre de Boisdeffre) Kafka; the torment of man, 1967. Translated by Wade Baskin

References