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  2. Princess Marie Bonaparte (2 July 1882 – 21 September 1962), known as Princess George of Greece and Denmark upon her marriage, was a French author and psychoanalyst, closely linked with Sigmund Freud.

  3. May 19, 2016 · Her work on Poe was finally published in 1933 and prompted words of praise from Freud (1933): Marie Bonaparte has directed the light of psychoanalysis upon the life and work of a great writer of a pathological type.

    • Francisco Pizarro Obaid
    • 2016
  4. Bonaparte, Marie 1882–1962. Great-grandniece of Napoleon Bonaparte, Princess Marie Bonaparte was a writer, psychoanalyst, and devotee of Sigmund Freud. Not a medical doctor, Bonaparte worked in France to help establish groups, including the Société Psychoanalytique de Paris (SPP), for non-medical psychotherapies.

  5. Marie Bonaparte gained recognition as an intellectual and one of the first French psychoanalysts. She translated several of Freud's books into French and published them at her own expense.

  6. Jul 13, 2021 · Marie Bonaparte (18821962) was the great-great-niece of Napoleon and the wife of the Prince of Greece and Denmark. A close associate of Freud, she played a decisive role in the rise of psychoanalysis in France.

    • Sylvie Chaperon, Camille Noûs
    • 2021
  7. This similarity was to play a role in the enthusiasm Marie Bonaparte put into her analysis of Poe's work. Bonaparte discovered Poe when she was eighteen through the Baudelaire translation, a gift from her father.

  8. Her most ambitious task was a 700-page psychobiography of Edgar Allan Poe that was first published in French in 1933. She was fascinated by Poe's gothic stories– with the return to life of dead persons and the eerie, unexpected turns of events.

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