Tuesday, 7 November 2017

Tuesday 14th November, 2017
5.15-6.30pm All Souls' College, Hovenden Room

Rebecca Rosenberg (King's College London) - 
'The Representation of Clinics, asiles, and maisons des femmes in Contemporary Francophone Women’s Writing'

My doctoral project focuses on embodied responses and reactions to original, and ongoing traumas as represented in contemporary francophone women’s writing. It will explore how female trauma survivors attempt to control their past and ongoing suffering through forms of bodily self-harm and deprivation. My project will initially investigate how supposed curative institutions attempt to control, contain, and marginalise the bodies of female trauma survivors. This paper will present an overview of my research thus far into the representation of clinics, asiles, and maison des femmes in works by Maïssa Bey, Chloé Delaume, and Linda Lê.

This paper will examine the purpose and objectives of each type of institution within their cultural, historical, and socio-political contexts, and it will explore how and why female trauma survivors are sent to these places. It will also investigate the ways in which the institutions re-inflict pain and suffering on the female detainees through their location, spatiality, and atmospherics, as well as through medical and non-medical treatment. It will analyse the impact of living in the institutions through the psychological and corporeal actions and reactions of the female inhabitants, while nuancing the concepts of agency, control, and survival. Indeed, this paper will ask how women attempt to survive, and even subvert, the societal powers that contain, marginalise, and re-traumatise, their bodies and minds. In this vein, it will explore the forms of resistance and solidarity that arise within the gynocentric communities of the institutions, while nuancing the role of the reader who becomes a privileged witness to the inside of these non-curative sites.


Hannie Lawlor (Wolfson College) - Ventriloquising Voices in (Auto)Fiction of the Extrême contemporain'

     Marianne Hirsch conceives postmemory as the consequence of traumatic recall at a generational remove; how inherited memories of trauma suffered by their parents affect the second generation and risk eclipsing their own (life) stories.  In this paper, I consider how Lydie Salvayre’s Pas pleurer can be read as interweaving the self-other relationship that this creates with that of autofiction.  Whilst in postmemory, the second-generational self becomes the mouthpiece through which the suppressed story of the other is voiced, autofiction casts the other as a stepping stone by which the author’s story might be told.  In Pas pleurer, Salvayre tells a story that long precedes her, but that perpetually alters her mother’s life and thus irrevocably impacts upon her own; that of the Spanish Civil War.  I contend that by mobilising two oppositional sets of self-other dynamics, Salvayre addresses and reworks the antagonistic pairs so often in play in relational life-writing. 
     This paper explores how Salvayre renegotiates generational binds at the level of narrative voice, intertwining the voices of mother and daughter to replace the self-other binary with simultaneous selves.  By analysing the fluid rather than fixed subject positions she creates, I aim to illustrate how Pas pleurer depicts boundaries between different generations as porous and in flux.  In doing so, I will argue that its second-generational ‘narrator’, Lydie, consciously cedes her place in the narrative as a means of telling not only her mother’s story, but also an indispensable part of her own. 

Sunday, 29 October 2017

Tuesday 31st October, 2017
5.15-6.30pm All Souls' College, Hovenden Room

William Clement (St. John's College)


'A bar crawl, a scandal, and fake news: tracing a religious outrage from Northern France to the international press in 1874'

On 21 April 1874, four workers from the French industrial town of Roubaix took a wooden statue of Christ on a bar crawl of several of the town’s cabarets, culminating in a series of scandalous events at the final cabaret that they visited. They were arrested, the cabaret was shut down, and the men were tried the following month for ‘Outrages to the Catholic religion’, despite there being no French law against sacrilege at the time.

This paper will take a microhistory approach to trace the way the events of this night were told and retold over the following months, both in France and abroad. The first part of the paper will examine the bar crawl itself, tying it into the fabric of working-class sociability in early Third Republic Roubaix. The second part will show how the court prosecutor turned this bar crawl into a religious scandal that attacked the central tenets of early Third Republic French identity. The final part of the paper will show how and where the events of the night and the trial were retold in newspapers through France, Belgium, Britain, and even North America. By analysing which features are preferred or even drastically altered in each retelling, we can see the role of editors in shaping narratives to fulfil their readerships’ prejudices.


Khalid Lyamlahy (St. Anne's College)

Un Désir d’écriture: Flaubert, Barthes et la pratique de la notation dans le Voyage en Italie'

Dans le long voyage littéraire et critique de Roland Barthes, Flaubert a été un compagnon utile, une présence dans l’écriture, jusque dans les derniers cours au Collège de France, sur le chemin qui mène à la Vita Nova. En relisant les fragments du Voyage en Italie de Flaubert à la lumière du projet barthésien de la préparation du roman, cette contribution cherche à montrer que dans la notation flaubertienne réside un désir, une volonté, un élan vers le Roman comme pratique absolue de l’écriture.
 --
Throughout his critical and literary work, Roland Barthes considered Flaubert as a helpful companion, a presence in writing, including in his late lectures at College de France dedicated to the preparation of his desired novel Vita Nova. By reading Flaubert's fragments from Voyage en Italie in light of Barthes's reflections on the preparation of the novel, this paper aims to demonstrate that Flaubert's practice of notation reveals his desire for the Novel as an absolute form of writing.

Monday, 23 October 2017

Oxford French Graduate Seminar
Michaelmas Term 2017

Tuesdays 5.15 – 6.30 pm
All Souls’ College, Hovenden Room

October 17th (2nd Week)

Waqas Mirza (Lincoln College)
'The Self-Translation of Mental Verbs in Samuel Beckett's Trilogy'

Philippe Panizzon (St. Anne's College)
‘'Ces rencontres qui voient à peine le jour’ (Rachid O.);  Identity, Mobility and Homosexual Encounters in Abdellah Taïa’s and Rachid O.’s Work

October 31st (4th Week)

William Clement (St. John's College)
'A Bar Crawl, a Scandal, and Fake News: Tracing a Religious Outrage from Northern France to the International Press in 1874'

Khalid Lyamlahy (St. Anne's College)
'Un Désir d’écriture: Flaubert, Barthes et la pratique de la notation dans le Voyage en Italie'

November 14th (6th Week)

Rebecca Rosenberg (King's College London)
'The Representation of Clinics, asiles, and maisons des femmes in Contemporary Francophone Women’s Writing'

Hannie Lawlor ( Wolfson College)
'Ventriloquising Voices in (Auto)Fiction of the Extrême contemporain'

Monday, 9 October 2017

Tuesday 17th October, 2017
5.15-6.30pm All Souls' College, Hovenden Room


Waqas Mirza (Lincoln College) - The Self-Translation of Mental Verbs in Samuel Beckett's Trilogy

This paper compares the translation of verbs describing mental processes in the trilogy, which include all types of cognitive actions and emotional states; it analyses its repercussions on the representation of the mind. Differences in Beckett’s verb translations are indeed extremely common and vary in type. While translating the trilogy, the author often widens or narrows the meaning of mental verbs. He also regularly substitutes a mental verb for another. These semantic differences have an effect on the representation of the protagonists’ minds. 


Philippe Panizzon (St. Anne's College) - ‘Ces rencontres qui voient à peine le jour’ (Rachid O.);  Identity, Mobility and Homosexual Encounters in Abdellah Taïa’s and Rachid O.’s Work

In his study Queer Nations (2000) Jarrod Hayes examines how North African literature from the 1950s to the 1990s deals with transgressive sexualities. Also, Joseph Massad shows in Desiring Arabs (2007) that from the 1990s western gay and lesbian identities have spread throughout the Arab world. In this paper I look at how two contemporary, outspokenly homosexual Moroccan writers, Abdellah Taïa and Rachid O., both question established models and suggest an uncoupling of homosexuality and identity in their work. How do these authors deal with the concept of a western gay identity, coming from a cultural background where such an identity is non-existent? While the critics who have studied these questions have been concerned to pigeonhole the narrators’ identity as queer or gay (Badin; Smith), I would like to demonstrate, first, how being a gay Muslim challenges the fixity of these two supposedly exclusive categories. Secondly, I will argue that the narrators’ selfhood is built through the fleeting affiliations they engage in, which resonates with  the practice of the sexual cruiser or loiterly subjectivity (Ross Chambers). Their selfhood, made of a plurality of different selves, in constant interrelation with others, dramatizes Jean-Luc Nancy’s thoughts in Être Singulier Pluriel in that the narrators’ singular being is constructed through the plurality of passing (sexual and non-sexual) encounters. Whilst this paper will challenge the ontological security of Muslim and western gay identity, it will shed new light on selfhood in Rachid O.’s and Taïa’s work and on the migrant homosexual self more generally.

Monday, 15 May 2017

May 23rd 
5.15-6.30pm
All Souls' College, Hovenden Room


Helen Craske (Merton College) 

Rachilde and the Art of the Book Review: A Matter of Taste


Rachilde is best known for works displaying overtly ‘Decadent’ themes, images or figures – from the gender-bending in Monsieur Vénus, to the necrophilia in La Tour d’amour. However, the tendency in modern criticism to concentrate on these elements of Rachilde’s work – as rich and rewarding as they are – often ends up eliding the wide-ranging and heterogeneous nature of the contribution Rachilde made to fin-de-siècle literary culture. In particular, her involvement in the Mercure de France has been relatively neglected. This paper attempts to redress this imbalance slightly, by providing an analysis of Rachilde’s book reviews at the turn of the century (c.1894-1906), situating them within and against the work of fellow writers and critics. In particular, I will explore how Rachilde manipulated her role as book reviewer at the Mercure in order to distinguish herself, and a select group of fellow writers, from the increasing novelistic production at the fin de siècle. I will argue that Rachilde’s self-aware reflections on criticism and aesthetic taste work alongside her playful approach and creative style, producing an ‘art’ of the book review that is both serious and irreverent in its treatment of partiality,  justice/ethics, exceptionality, and literary influence.


Sinan John-Richards (Wadham College) 

Il n’y a pas de rapport sexuel’ : Lacan, Sexuation, and God

In this paper I show how Lacan’s conception of sexual difference (Il n’y a pas de rapport sexuel’ ) occurs at the level of the signifier and not at the level of the signified. The ‘non rapport sexuel’ does not denote the impossibility of the sexual act, instead Lacan suggests that the ‘non rapport sexuel’ is the condition of possibility of the sexual act. The impasse reached in the ‘non rapport sexuel’ is the renunciation of unrestricted jouissance at the original level of castration. Absolute jouissance would entail a return to the unregulated desire of the Father of the mythic hoard. The dislocation that sexuality exposes through the ‘non rapport sexuel’ is Lacan’s equivalent of the ontological gap which finds its earliest expression in German Idealismmost notably in the philosophies of Schelling and Hegel. This is, however, the truth founded on a lie. The very same lie which is the object-obstacle necessary to sustain the truth. This mimics the function of God, the meaningless and unnecessary lie (counterfactual) which supports the structure of the Symbolic, and therefore the entire empiricism of modern science. As Lacan put it : ‘la vérité surgit de la méprise’. 



Tuesday, 2 May 2017

May 9th (3rd Week) 5.15-6.30pm

Sam Bailey (Jesus College)
'Beauty or the Beast? Literary Representations of the Hermaphrodite in Late Eighteenth-Century
France'


This paper examines the figure of the hermaphrodite in French literature from 1772 to 1798. It draws on Jacques Cazotte’s Le Diable amoureux (1772), the Chevalier d'Eon’s La Pucelle de Tonnerre (1785) and two pornographic novels by the Comte de Mirabeau (1783 and 1798) to study the significance of this literary figure in the context of the French Enlightenment. This paper initiates a dialogue between eighteenth-century material and recently published theoretical works to investigate the hermaphrodite’s relation to a performative conception of gender, the pathologisation of non-standard bodies and eroticism. The different literary hermaphrodites depicted in these texts complicate the traditional picture of the eighteenth century as one of demystification in which an overriding philosophical and scientific desire to classify caused binaries of all kinds to solidify. Furthermore, they clash with much of the non-fiction literature relating to gender and the hermaphrodite that was circulating in late eighteenth-century France. Far from conforming to existing norms, these hermaphrodite texts suggest a new interpretive lens through which to view this figure: that of le fantastique, a nascent literary genre that deals in worlds where realism shades off into make-believe by almost imperceptible degrees. The texts offer an alternative view of gender in late eighteenth-century France in which empirical investigation fails, all categories prove chimerical and monsters could very well be real.

Melissa Purkiss (Wolfson College)
'Gaito Gazdanov, a 'Russian Proust'? The question of French influence for Russian émigrés in interwar Paris' 

Friday, 21 April 2017

April 25th (1st Week) 5.15-6.30pm 

Elliot Grogan (Christ Church College) 
'"The past should be altered by the present as much as the present directs the past"; Navigating Alexandre Dumas' revolutionary past' 
This paper evaluates Alexandre Dumas’ depiction of the past in the Mémoires d’un Médecin cycle of historical novels. Also known as the Marie-Antoinette romances, the collection of five novels, penned between 1845-1855, narrates the final days of the Ancien Régime, dramatising and attempting to make sense of the French Revolution and its chief protagonists. I argue that Dumas’ oeuvre follows in the poetic tradition of Sir Walter Scott, blurring the boundary between history and fiction as ‘stories, not facts are what we turn to when we want to make sense of chaos and complexity.’
In re-telling the foundation myth of modern France, Dumas’ series navigates the political and philosophical conflicts of revolution within a thoroughly Romantic context. In doing so, and drawing upon the weight of history, the novelist attempts to re-define French national identity, and to construct what Victor Hugo described in Dumas’ novels as, ‘cette idée Française.’ This paper consequently suggests that Dumas’ oeuvre supports T.S.Eliot’s assertion that the artist’s relationship with the past is not a purely linear one. Rather, whilst the past directs a political, social and artistic present, Dumas also actively shapes the nineteenth-century reader’s collective memory of its revolutionary past.

Matthew Innes (University College) 
‘Pierre de Belloy and legal polemic during the French Wars of Religion’

Pierre de Belloy (c.1550 – 1611) was a French jurist and polemicist during the Wars of Religion whose importance has been unjustly neglected. In this paper, I offer an overview of my research project. This is primarily in the history of political thought: I explain how Belloy contributed to a particular style of French obedience theory which was, in turn, a response to Calvinist and Catholic resistance theories. In his defence of Henri of Navarre, later Henri IV, he also engaged with the disputed tradition of Gallicanism. Secondly, I suggest that Belloy’s life helps to illuminate the political and social history of his day. This is partly through the stories and rumours which he repeats in his political works, but it will also come from the documentary evidence of his later life as a Toulousan magistrate allows us to better understand the process of rebuilding civic institutions after decades of civil war.



Monday, 17 April 2017


Oxford French Graduate Seminar
Trinity Term 2017

Tuesdays 5.15 – 6.30 pm
All Souls’ College, Hovenden Room

April 25th (1st Week)

Elliot Grogan (Christ Church College)
'"The past should be altered by the present as much as the present directs the past"; Navigating Alexandre Dumas' revolutionary past' 

Matthew Innes (University College)
‘Pierre de Belloy and legal polemic during the French Wars of Religion’

May 9th (3rd Week)

Melissa Purkiss (Wolfson College)

'Gaito Gazdanov, a 'Russian Proust'? The question of French influence for Russian émigrés in interwar Paris' 

Sam Bailey (Jesus College)
'Beauty or the Beast? Literary Representations of the Hermaphrodite in Eighteenth-Century France'

May 23rd (5th Week)

Sinan John-Richards (Wadham College)
‘“Il n’y a pas de rapport sexuel”: Lacan, Sexuation, and God’

Helen Craske (Merton College)

 ‘Rachilde and the Art of the Book Review’

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

French Graduate Seminar
Tuesday February 21st (6th Week)
All Souls' College, Hovenden Room
5.15-6.30pm

Natalie Pangburn (Lincoln College)
'Foudroiement: Wajdi Mouawad and the philosophy of Jan Patočka'

One of the most prolific and well-received French-language playwrights of his generation, Lebanese Canadian Wajdi Mouawad has authored twenty-three original plays, recently directed new adaptations of Sophocles’ seven surviving plays, and served in a number of high-profile positions in the French theatre, including his current position as Artistic Director at the Théâtre national de la Colline. Although Mouawad’s literary and dramatic sources have been the subject of numerous studies, one influence that has, as of yet, gone largely unexplored is that of Czech phenomenologist Jan Patočka. This paper argues that this is an important lacuna in contemporary scholarship. It describes how Mouawad discovered the works of Jan Patočka in 1991, the year his career began, and has frequently referenced Patočka’s writings in his exegetical texts and interviews, as well as in the plays themselves. This paper explores how Patočka’s ideas provided Mouawad with a language and philosophical framework for his artistic project and ambitions. It describes a number of Patočka’s key philosophical innovations - ‘shakenness’, the three movements of human existence, metanoia and solidarity - and demonstrates the deep impact of these ideas on Mouawad’s dramatic work. It argues that these ideas are in fact the basis for the four key philosophical and theatrical ambitions most frequently expressed by Mouawad: metamorphosis; the recognition of the other; responsibility; and  ‘solidarity of the shaken’. The paper concludes with a brief discussion of how, and to what degree, Mouawad achieves his Patočkan philosophical and ethical ambitions.


Robert Pruett (St Cross College)
'Remy de Gourmont's Lilith: mythic structures of sexual pessimism'


Remy de Gourmont's work at the end of the 19th century (notably Sixtine, La culture des idées, and Le livre des masques) cemented the author as both a practitioner and analyst of Symbolism's aesthetic tactics of subjectivity and dream. Regarded as the philosopher laureate of the movement, he sought to carry these unfolding artistic concerns into the theoretical realms of idealism, the study of cultural constructs, and, central to this paper, the unwieldy subject of sexuality and its governing influences. The bulk of Gourmont's fiction explores, in one form or another, the precariousness of love and sex in a phenomenological world. Of particular note is Lilith (1891-2), a play which restructures, re-purposes, and combines elements of lapsarian lore to the effect of a lewd and parodistic origin myth of carnal desire and its flaws. I argue that Gourmont's dramatization, however ironic, adeptly personifies the forces which shape human sexual relations in a manner unique among his other works. My discussion of the archetypes which he employs will focus primarily on three main themes: Firstly, the struggle between patriarchal control and chaotic 'inutilité' in the figures of Jehovah and Satan, secondly, the principle of individuation in the figure of Adam, and thirdly, the question of ideal sexuality as a 'lost inheritance' in the figures of Lilith and Eve. 

Tuesday, 31 January 2017

Oxford French Graduate Seminar
Tuesday February 7th (4th Week)
All Souls’ College, Hovenden Room 5.15 - 6.30pm 
'Cet autre moy': Poetic Selves and Other Friends in Selected French Writings of the Sixteenth Century’
Vittoria Fallanca (Pembroke College, Oxford)
My paper begins by considering a line from a complainte by the French poet Philippe Desportes, written in 1581. Drawing on Terence Cave’s Pré-histoires, I identify this line as the first use of the French substantive ‘moy’. Like Cave, I take issue with the idea that what we see here is the beginning of a grand narrative of ‘selfhood’ and ‘modern’ subjectivity. I begin instead with the idea that ‘cet autre moy’ occurs in the context of Renaissance writings on friendship. These were characterised by the ‘Aristotelian-Ciceronian model’, whereby a friend was portrayed, under the shadow of Neoplatonism, as another self. I propose that alongside this well-established model of friendship, there is another, competing model. I call this model ‘anterotic’, as at its heart lies the Greek myth of Eros and Anteros. The anterotic model is characterised by strife as well as mutuality, by competition alongside imitation, and by opposition as much as communality. This other, ‘anterotic’ model, can help us to capture and make sense of some of the most salient characteristic of sixteenth-century French writings, including (but not limited to) tensions between Latin and the vernacular, localised imitative poet-model relationships and the friendships between the writers themselves. What emerges is not so much ‘modern’ identity as we know it, but a poetic identity, rooted in the double-sidedness of anteros.  
‘When water was thicker than blood: the development of Marie de Gournay's famille d'alliance in the seventeenth century'
Jess Allen (University of Durham)
Today we email, text, and phone our friends, imparting personal and private messages about all kinds of issues from gossip and social arrangements to love and loss. In the Republic of Letters, however, missives were public documents: they were exchanged by friends who aimed to praise each other's work and good qualities, promote their own, and offer mentorship. This large network contained several smaller networks consisting of alliances between scholars which were mostly elective and often transnational.

Marie de Gournay's (1565 - 1645) relationship with her père d'alliance Montaigne is already well-documented and indeed dominated Gournay scholarship until recently. Her other correspondences are comparatively much less well-known: this paper will explore the letters she exchanged with her own fille d'alliance, Anna Maria van Schurman (1607 - 1688), who went on to expand her family by adding a sœur d'alliance, Marie du Moulin (1622 - 1699). Building on existing scholarship about women in the Republic of Letters which provides a coherent account of this famille d'alliance, I will reconstruct their friendships through reading these letters, examining the extent to which they were able to control their self-fashioning and the ways in which these literary identities were subsequently received. The paper will show what we can learn about their individual circumstances and their ideas about relationships, highlighting discrepancies between how they write about themselves and how they are written about by others both during and after their lifetime.

Sunday, 15 January 2017

Oxford French Graduate Seminar
Hilary Term 2017

Tuesdays 5.15 – 6.30 pm
All Souls’ College, Hovenden Room

January 24th (2nd Week)

Marie Chabbert (Wolfson College)‘Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité? Thinking Ontology, Community and Extremism with Jean-Luc Nancy’

Roundtable Discussion: ‘Graduates Anonymous’(A chance for current graduate students to share their thoughts, experiences and advice about graduate research)

February 7th (4th Week)

Jess Allen (University of Durham)‘When water was thicker than blood: the development of Marie de Gournay's famille d'alliance in the seventeenth century.' 

Vittoria Fallanca (Pembroke College)'Cet autre moy': Poetic Selves and Other Friends in Selected French Writings of the Sixteenth Century

February 21st (6th Week)

Natalie Pangburn (Lincoln College)'Foudroiement: Wajdi Mouawad and the philosophy of Jan Patočka'. 

Robert Pruett (St Cross College)'The figure of the demon in the work of Remy de Gourmont: mythic structures of sexual pessimism'