David Macey
Macey's publicity photograph
Born (1949-10-05 ) 5 October 1949Sunderland Died 7 October 2011(2011-10-07) (aged 62) Occupation
Historian
biographer
translator
Nationality English
David Macey (5 October 1949 – 7 October 2011) was an English translator and intellectual historian of the French left. He translated around sixty books from French to English, and wrote biographical studies of Jacques Lacan , Michel Foucault and Frantz Fanon .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
Life
David Macey was born in Sunderland and grew up in Houghton-le-Spring . His father was a miner who had been sent down the pit aged fourteen, and his mother a woman whose family had been unable to afford for her to take up a grammar school place.[ 2] [ 3] He was educated at Durham Johnston Grammar School and went on to read French at University College London ,[ 1] where he wrote a PhD on Paul Nizan .[ 4]
Interested in trying to link Marxism and psychoanalysis ,[ 1] Macey became a prolific contributor to Radical Philosophy .[ 2] From 1974 he taught part-time at North London Polytechnic , UCL and City University London . In 1975 he was a founding member of the British Campaign for an Independent East Timor .[ 3] After his partner Margaret Atack took a permanent post at Leeds University in 1981, Macey left academia to become a full-time writer and translator.[ 1] Later, in 1995, he was appointed research associate in the French department of Leeds University; in 2010 he became special professor in translation at the University of Nottingham .[ 3]
Macey married Atack in 1988, and they adopted three children.[ 1]
Selected works
Translations
Jacques Lacan by Anika Lemaire , 1979.
Réponses: the autobiography of Françoise Sagan , 1979.
The little mermaids: a novel by Yves Dangerfield , 1979.
Teachers, writers, celebrities: the intellectuals of modern France by Régis Debray , 1981.
Matisse: paper cutouts , [text by] Jean Guichard-Meili , 1983.
The sculpture of Henri Matisse by Isabelle Monod-Fontaine , 1984.
Colette: a passion for life by Geneviève Dormann , 1985.
From Taylorism to Fordism: a rational madness by Bernard Doray , 1988.
Democracy and political theory by Claude Lefort , 1988.
(tr. and ed.) New essays on narcissism by Béla Grunberger , 1989.
New foundations for psychoanalysis by Jean Laplanche , 1989.
The Soviet military system by Jacques Sapir , 1990
Critique of Modernity by Alain Touraine , 1995.
Automatic discourse analysis by Michel Pêcheux , ed. Tony Hak and Niels Helsloot, 1995.
The object of literature by Pierre Macherey , 1995
(tr. and ed.) Lacan: a critical reader by Jacques Lacan , 1995.
What is democracy? by Alain Touraine , 1997.
Can we live together? Equality and difference by Alain Touraine , 2000.
Society must be defended: lectures at the Collège de France, 1975–76 by Michel Foucault , ed. Mauro Bertani and Alessandro Fontana, New York: Picador, 2003
Suicide bombers: Allah's new martyrs by Farhad Khosrokhavar , 2005
The suffering of the immigrant by Abdelmalek Sayad , with a preface by Pierre Bourdieu , 2007.
Psychoanalysis: its image and its public by Serge Moscovici , ed. with an introduction by Gerard Duveen, 2008.
Suicide: the hidden side of modernity by Christian Baudelot and Roger Establet , 2008.
The Single Woman and the Fairy-Tale Prince by Jean-Claude Kauffmann , 2008.
Resilience by Boris Cyrulnik , 2009.
Violence by Michel Wieviorka , 2009.
(tr. with Steve Corcoran) The communist hypothesis , 2010
The meaning of cooking by Jean-Claude Kaufmann , 2010.
The curious history of love by Jean-Claude Kaufmann, 2011
Love online by Jean-Claude Kaufmann, 2012
Emile Durkheim: a biography by Marcel Fournier, 2013
Other works
Lacan in Contexts , London: Verso, 1988.
The Lives of Michel Foucault , London: Hutchinson, 1993; NY: Pantheon, 1993.
Introduction to The four fundamental concepts of psycho-analysis by Jacques Lacan , tr. Alan Sheridan , Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1994.
Frantz Fanon: A Life , London: Granta, 2000.
The Penguin dictionary of critical theory , London: Penguin, 2000.
References
^ a b c d e Neil Belton, David Macey: His historical studies of philosophers won over French readers , The Guardian , 2 November 2011
^ a b c Neil Belton and Peter Osborne, David Macey, 1949–2011: Biographer of the French intellectual Left , Radical Philosophy 171 (Jan/Feb 2012)
^ a b c d John G. Taylor and Elaine Capizzi, Dr David Macey: Internationally renowned French scholar , The Independent , 12 November 2011.
^ David Macey, The work of Paul Nizan: a study in the influence of a political viewpoint on literary themes and structures , PhD thesis, University College London, 1982.
External links
International National Other