Louis Cazamian Explained

Louis François Cazamian
Birth Date:2 April 1877
Birth Place:Saint-Denis, Île de la Réunion
Death Date:22 September 1965
Occupation:Academic
Nationality:French
Subject:English Literature

Louis François Cazamian (2 April 1877 – 22 September 1965[1]) was a French academic and literary critic. He was the author of many books in both French and English dealing with English literature, including A History of English Literature (1927, with Émile Legouis), Le Roman Social en Angleterre (an early study of the social novel), and The Development of English Humor (1952). Other works include The Social Impact of Dickens's Novels, L'Humour de Shakespeare and Symbolisme et Poésie. Along with his wife, Madeleine Cazamian, he translated English poetry into French.[2]

As professor of English literature at the University of Paris, he delivered three Rice Lectures in 1911: "The Unity of France", "The France of Today and Tomorrow" and "The Personality of France".[3] He delivered the 1931 Andrew Lang Lecture, "Andrew Lang and the Maid of France". He received honorary degrees from Oxford, St Andrews, and Durham universities.

He was professor of modern English literature and civilization at the Sorbonne from 1925 to 1945.[4] He supervised, among others, Raja Rao and Dragoș Protopopescu in their time at the Sorbonne. He is thanked in the preface to Ian Watt's The Rise of the Novel.

References

  1. http://www.culture.gouv.fr/LH/LH211/PG/FRDAFAN84_O19800035v1057866.htm culture.gouv.fr : certificate of the Legion of Honour
  2. Poèmes choisis by George Meredith, L. Cazamian, M. Cazamian. Moraud. Marcel. The French Review. 44. 6. 1971. 1130–1131. 386879.
  3. http://dspace.rice.edu/bitstream/1911/8460/4/article_RI054247.pdf{{Dead link|date=March 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  4. Twentieth Century Authors: A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Literature, edited by Stanley J. Kunitz and Howard Haycraft, New York, The H. W. Wilson Company, 1942.