Modern French Identities
This series aims to publish monographs, editions or collections of papers based on recent research into modern French literature. It welcomes contributions from academics, researchers and writers worldwide and in British and Irish universities in particular. Modern French Identities focuses on the French and Francophone writing of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, whose formal experiments and revisions of genre have combined to create an entirely new set of literary forms, from the thematic autobiographies of Michel Leiris and Bernard Noël to the magic realism of French Caribbean writers. The idea that identities are constructed rather than found, and that the self is an area to explore rather than a given pretext, runs through much of modern French literature, from Proust, Gide, Apollinaire and Césaire to Barthes, Duras, Kristeva, Glissant, Germain and Roubaud. This series explores the turmoil in ideas and values expressed in the works of theorists like Lacan, Irigaray, Foucault, Fanon, Deleuze and Bourdieu and traces the impact of current theoretical approaches – such as gender and sexuality studies, de/coloniality, intersectionality, and ecocriticism – on the literary and cultural interpretation of the self. The series publishes studies of individual authors and artists, comparative studies, and interdisciplinary projects and welcomes research on autobiography, cinema, fiction, poetry and performance art and/or the intersections between them.
Editorial Board
Contemporary Literature and Thought: Martin Crowley (University of Cambridge)
Francophone Studies: Louise Hardwick (University of Birmingham) and Jean Khalfa (University of Cambridge)
Gender and Sexuality Studies: Florian Grandena (University of Ottawa) and Cristina Johnston (University of Stirling)
Language and Linguistics: Michaël Abecassis (University of Oxford)
Literature and Art: Peter Collier and Jean Khalfa (University of Cambridge)
Literature and Non-fiction: Muriel Pic (University of Bern)
Poetry: Nina Parish (University of Stirling) and Emma Wagstaff (University of Birmingham)
Zoopoetics and Ecocriticism: Anne Simon (CNRS/Ecole normale supérieure, Paris)
Titles
-
Rage
Affect and Resistance in French and Francophone Culture and Thought, 1968–2020Volume 150Edited Collection 252 Pages -
The Environment and Marguerite Yourcenar
Readings of «Le Labyrinthe du monde»Volume 149©2024 Monographs 300 Pages -
Le corps de la lettre
La quête de la totalité dans la poétique d’Isidore IsouVolume 146©2023 Monographs 390 Pages -
Catching up with Time
Belatedness and Anachronies in Francophone Literature and CultureVolume 145©2022 Edited Collection 250 Pages -
Variations on the Ethics of Mourning in Modern Literature in French
Volume 143©2022 Edited Collection 316 Pages -
Marie Nimier
Le Sujet et ses écritures / The Self in the Web of LanguageVolume 142©2021 Edited Collection 300 Pages