Lloyd Austin | |
Birth Date: | 4 November 1915 |
Birth Place: | Melbourne, Australia |
Death Date: | 30 December 1994 |
Death Place: | Cambridge |
Occupation: | Linguist and literary critic |
Alma Mater: | University of Melbourne |
Lloyd James Austin FBA (4 November 1915 – 30 December 1994) was an Australian linguist and literary scholar, who worked in Great Britain as a university teacher.[1]
Lloyd Austin studied at the University of Melbourne under Alan Rowland Chisholm and, with a French Government scholarship, at the University of Paris from 1937 under the supervision of Maurice Levaillant. There on 3 April 1940 he presented his doctorate entitled Paul Bourget: sa vie et son œuvre jusqu'en 1889 (Paris: Librairie E. Droz, 1940), setting out for Australia shortly thereafter with his French wife, a graduate in English from the Sorbonne, on one of the last boats to leave France. He taught first of all in a school in Melbourne, served in the war from 1942 to 1945 and after the war was appointed to a lectureship at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. In the early 1950s he spent an extended period of research in Paris, taking up a position in 1956 as Professor of Modern French Literature at the University of Manchester in succession to Percy Mansell Jones (1889–1968). In 1961 he moved to Cambridge and in 1967 succeeded Lewis Charles Harmer to the Drapers Chair of French, at the University of Cambridge.
He served as General Editor of French Studies from 1967 to 1980.
From 1980 Austin succeeded Eugène Vinaver as foreign member of the Académie royale de langue et de littérature françaises de Belgique[2] He in turn was succeeded by Robert Darnton.
He married Jeanne-Françoise Guérin in 1939 and they had three sons (including the photographer James Austin and the scholar of ancient Greek Colin Austin) and one daughter.[3]