LAUTRAMONT, COUNT (COMTE) DE


Meaning of LAUTRAMONT, COUNT (COMTE) DE in English

born April 4, 1846, Montevideo, Uruguay died Nov. 4, 1870, Paris, France pseudonym of Isidore-lucien Ducasse poet, a strange and enigmatic figure in French literature, who is recognized as a major influence on the Surrealists. The son of a chancellor in the French consulate, Lautramont was sent to France for schooling; he studied at the imperial lyces in Tarbes (185962) and Pau (186365). He set out for Paris in 1867, ostensibly to attend the cole Polytechnique, and disappeared into obscurity. Nothing more is known of his life, and no portraits of him exist. He took the name of Lautramont and his title from the arrogant hero of Eugne Sue's historical novel Latraumont (1837). The first stanza of his prose poem Les Chants de Maldoror was published anonymously in 1868. A complete edition was printed in 1869, but the Belgian publisher, alarmed by its violence and fearing prosecution, refused to distribute it to booksellers. The Posies, a shorter work, was printed in June 1870. Lautramont died in Paris later that same year, possibly a victim of the police during the Siege of Paris. Maldoror was republished in 1890. The work received little notice until the Surrealists, struck by its disquieting juxtaposition of strange and unrelated images, adopted Lautramont as one of their exemplars. Above all it was the savagery of protest in Maldoror, as if revolt against the human condition had achieved definitive blasphemy, that created a ferment among the poets and painters of the early 20th century.

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