Marguerite Aucouturier

Marguerite Derrida (née Aucouturier) is a French psychoanalyst and the wife of philosopher Jacques Derrida from 1957 until his death in 2004.

Aucouturier was Michel Aucouturier's daughter, one of Derrida's friends at the École normale supérieure. She met her future husband in 1953 in a village in Haute-Savoie. They married on 9 June 1957 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[1]

Her family came from a Slavic-speaking background and she has translated several books by Melanie Klein in addition to Morphology of the Folktale by Vladimir Propp.4

Translations

  • Melanie Klein :
    • Essais de psychanalyse. 1921-1945, Payot, 1984.
    • Deuil et dépression, Payot et Rivages, 2004
    • Psychanalyse d'enfants, Payot et Rivages, 2005
    • Le complexe d'Œdipe, Payot et Rivages, 2006
    • Sur l'enfant, Payot et Rivages, 2012
  • Iouri Ianovski, Les Cavaliers, Paris, Éditions Gallimard, trans. in collaboration with P. Zankiévitch and Elyane Jacquet, reviewed and presented by Louis Aragon, 1957
  • Roman Jakobson, La génération qui a gaspillé ses poètes, Paris, Allia, 2001.
  • Maxim Gorki, Vie de Klim Samguine, 1961
  • Vladimir Propp, Morphologie du conte

Bibliography

  • Benoît Peeters, Benoît (2010). Derrida (in French). Flammarion. ISBN 9782081214071.
  • Benoît Peeters, Trois ans avec Derrida. Les carnets d'un biographe, Paris, Flammarion, 2010, 248 pp.
  • (in English) David Mikics, Who Was Jacques Derrida? An Intellectual Biography, 2009, New Haven, Yale University Press, 288 pp., ISBN 9780300115420

References

  1. Peeters, Benoit (2013). "5, A Year in America". Derrida: A Biography. John Wiley & Sons.


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