Tuesday 19th November 2024, 5:15-6:30pmHovenden Room, All Souls College
Caitlin Sturrock (Bristol): The
Sourde-Muette and the Good Mother in Pauliska, ou la perversité
moderne (1797-1798)
Deafness in eighteenth-century France was a growing fascination; the 1770s marked a period of shifting societal perceptions of the sourd-muet. The Abbé de l’Épée published his treatises on the education of the sourds-muets, institutionalising his methods from the school he opened the decade before, and Pierre Desloges published his influential Observations d’un Sourd et Muet, sur un cours élémentaire d’éducation des sourds et muets in 1779, which marked one of the first interventions of a sourd-muet into these debates. Under the Revolution, the sourd-muet became a figure to imitate during the growing paranoia that spoken language caused the violent excesses of the Terror. This is what underpins the case study of this paper.
Published over two volumes in An VI (1797-1798),
Jacques-Antoine de Révéroni Saint-Cyr’s Pauliska, ou la perversité moderne
follows the virtuous comtesse as she moves across borders – from Poland to
Italy – in search of safety for herself, her lover – Ernest – and her son –
Edvinski. Facing the Baron d’Olnitz, the counterfeiters under the Danube, and
Salviati’s group of mesmerists, Pauliska oscillates between imprisonment and
freedom to finally end reunited with Ernest and Edvinski. In examining deafness
and irrational hearing, this paper will argue that the eponymous Pauliska is
virtuous and rational precisely because she is a sourde-muette. When
this disability is also central to ideals of femininity – modesty and virtue –
this novel further evokes Revolutionary ideas on motherhood. Here, the ideal of
women’s enlightenment and the remedy to the irrationality of the Revolution lie
in the sourde-muette.
Elliot Koubis (St John’s): ‘Being an “ethical” queer
subject: Édouard Louis in Greece’
This paper explores what is means to be an ‘ethical’ queer subject in a time where queer movements have largely receded from view or have won mainstream acceptance in certain contexts. It will also explore whether the imagined LGBTQ+ ‘community’ in this climate imposes norms on queer bodies and expression. Louis’s Changer: Méthode (2021) will be read alongside a recent poetry collection in Greek by Spyros Chairetis, Ο Γοργόνος και άλλα πλάσματα (The Merman and Other Creatures, 2023) to examine whether there exists an anxiety for queer subjects across borders to be radical political actors.
The
paper will draw upon approaches to homonormativity to show how norms shape
attitudes toward the queer body and political solidarity towards marginalized
groups, as well as expressions of queer shame and regret. By reading Louis’s
work through the lens of Chairetis’s poems, the paper will highlight how both
authors use apologetic forms of writing to establish a more ethical
relationship with queer subjects and collectives. This comparison will
highlight how recent queer writing has impacted our understanding of queer
sexuality as a political, anti-normative demand and underline the existence of
an anti-normative ‘politics of respectability’ in queer cultures. What is more,
this paper will stress the need to place literature from the ‘European South’
on the same level as that from the ‘European North’ and it will demonstrate how
such comparisons can yield fruitful results.
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