Goldmann, Lucien (1913-70). Leading exponent of sociological and structural approaches to literature and philosophy. After studies in his native Bucharest, and in Vienna, Paris, and Geneva (with Piaget), he taught in Paris, and later Brussels. His celebrated and contentious study of Pascal and Racine, Le Dieu caché (1955), correlates their tragic vision with contradictions in contemporary social structures. His Pour une sociologie du roman (1964) suggests homologies between the structures of 20th-c. novels, especially Malraux's, and those of modern capitalism. Drawing on the early Lukács, he proposed to reconcile Marxism and Structuralism in a ‘genetic structuralism’ which was influential, especially in the sociology of literature and culture, during the 1960s.
[Michael Kelly]




