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May 6, 2015 · Writing about the Catastrophe, says Marcel Cohen in Steven Jaron's translation, turns the author into a curator of salient "facts".
The death of Marcel Cohen on 5 November 1974 was a grievous loss to linguistic scholarship, and to the study of Hamito-Semitic, above all of Ethiopian languages.
Marcel Cohen was born in the Paris suburb of Asnières in 1937. Since his debut novel in 1969, he has published numerous volumes made up of short narratives. Several of his books have been translated into English, including Mirrors, The Emperor Peacock Moth, and Walls.
Marcel Cohen. Marcel Samuel Raphaël Cohen (February 6, 1884 – November 5, 1974) was a French linguist. He was an important scholar of Semitic languages and especially of Ethiopian languages. He studied the French language and contributed much to general linguistics.
At the National Library of Israel, you can find information on Marcel Cohen (1884-1974) and view a variety of items related to the topic such as manuscripts, books, archives, photographs and more. Read more at:
COHEN, MARCEL (Samuel Raphael ; 1884–1974), French linguist and philologist. Born in Paris, he studied at the Paris School of Oriental Languages from where he went on a study mission to Algeria. The results of this mission were summarized in his book, Le parler arabe des Juifs d'Alger (1912).
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Marcel Cohen was a linguist with a profound interest in ethnography and in sociology. In the Ethiopian field that interested was expressed in numerous articles concerning the material culture, games, ceremonies, popular beliefs and magic, music and poetry, social life and political situation.