The Life and Works of E. A. Poe: a Psychoanalytic Interpretation  

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-'''''The Life and Works of E. A. Poe: a Psychoanalytic Interpretation''''' ([[1933]]) is a [[psychobiography]] and a [[Psychoanalytic literary criticism|psychoanalytic]] reading of the work of [[Edgar Allan Poe]] written by [[Princess Marie Bonaparte]]. +'''''The Life and Works of E. A. Poe: a Psychoanalytic Interpretation''''' ([[1933]]) is a [[psychobiography]] and a [[Psychoanalytic literary criticism|psychoanalytic]] reading of the work of [[Edgar Allan Poe]] written by [[Princess Marie Bonaparte]]. [[Jacques Lacan]] made use of her commentary in his seminar on "[[The Purloined Letter]]."
 + 
 +Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/life-and-works-of-edgar-allen-poe-the-a-psychoanalytic-interpretation#ixzz2ETCSJsvw
 + 
Her thesis is that Poe's art was the product of neurosis. According to Bonaparte, Poe was a "repressed sado-masochist and necrophilist" (299). Bonaparte also claimed that Poe was impotent: "It was opium, [[Hervey Allen]] claims, which made Poe sexually impotent, since his conduct with [[Mary Devereaux]] was still entirely normal." (85) Her thesis is that Poe's art was the product of neurosis. According to Bonaparte, Poe was a "repressed sado-masochist and necrophilist" (299). Bonaparte also claimed that Poe was impotent: "It was opium, [[Hervey Allen]] claims, which made Poe sexually impotent, since his conduct with [[Mary Devereaux]] was still entirely normal." (85)

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The Life and Works of E. A. Poe: a Psychoanalytic Interpretation (1933) is a psychobiography and a psychoanalytic reading of the work of Edgar Allan Poe written by Princess Marie Bonaparte. Jacques Lacan made use of her commentary in his seminar on "The Purloined Letter."

Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/life-and-works-of-edgar-allen-poe-the-a-psychoanalytic-interpretation#ixzz2ETCSJsvw


Her thesis is that Poe's art was the product of neurosis. According to Bonaparte, Poe was a "repressed sado-masochist and necrophilist" (299). Bonaparte also claimed that Poe was impotent: "It was opium, Hervey Allen claims, which made Poe sexually impotent, since his conduct with Mary Devereaux was still entirely normal." (85)

René Laforgue, had published The Defeat of Baudelaire: A Psychoanalytical Study of the Neurosis of Charles Baudelaire with the same publisher [1].

References

Bonaparte, Marie. (1949). The life and works of Edgar Allan Poe, a psycho-analytic interpretation (John Rodker, Trans.). London: Imago. (Original work published 1933)



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