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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Dépêche de Northfield: Meeting Maryse Condé

Our own Déborah Ferrand shares glowing notes from her trip to Carleton College, with Sarah Boardman and Séverine Bates, to hear Maryse Condé last week:



Some of us had the extreme pleasure to attend the lecture given by Maryse Condé at Carleton University on April 20th. As graduate students and future specialists of francophone literature, it was really an honour to meet such an incredible woman and author.


Two French 1004 students decided to come along with us, they wanted to know more about her life. Before going to Carleton, I wondered how to make them understand the intensity and meaning of meeting Maryse Condé and listening to her. I ended up telling them that it was pretty much like meeting a rock star of literature. But she is much more than that for the people who got the opportunity and pleasure to read and analyze her novels. She not only wrote remarkable novels, but she is also very involved in the crafting of French schools curriculums, as she makes sure that slavery and colonialism be taught.

The talk was first entitled « Journey of a Carribean woman » but she later decided to change it to « Searching for one's voice. » She asked herself what it is to write Maryse Condé (to write in her own language)? Where do her voice, her style and themes come from? This conference falls directly in the line of her current work as she explained she is writing her autobiography. She talked about her life and influences and how she was raised in a climate of adoration for the French language and literature and repression of the Creole language. Only when she studied at the Lycée Fénélon (in the Classes préparatoires aux Grandes écoles) in Metropolitan France did she discover who Aimé Césaire and the négritude movement were, and above all what it really meant to be black and Caribbean. These discoveries and her desire to know her African origins, would explain her fascination for Africa, its people and culture as well as her decision to go live there with her first husband. Africa would soon become her source of inspiration for her first novel. She described this African adventure as the first part of her life as a woman and writer, the second part being, according to her, her return to Guadeloupe and the third, her life in America.


Besides being an amazing orator (she talked for one and a half hours without any notes), Maryse Condé is also a very approachable and generous woman. She came accompanied by her husband, Richard Philcox, who is also her translator for English, an interesting fact that I did not know. FerrandCondé.jpg


In the end, it was the opportunity of a lifetime to meet an author we all read and worked on, and we are thrilled we attended this very special event.


Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Dossier: Pourquoi les études littéraires/Why literature matters

From the marvelous resource Fabula, a dossier on recent writings defending literary studies. References span the Atlantic Ocean, from Martha Nussbaum to Yves Citton.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Kudos: Dan Brewer awarded for his graduate advising

Our own Prof. Dan Brewer was among the faculty honored by the 2011 COGS Outstanding Faculty Award!

Come celebrate with us TOMORROW, Monday 25th, 4-6:30pm in the Campus Club (4th Floor Coffman).

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Lecture: "Journey of a Caribbean Writer," Maryse Condé (4/20, 7:30pm, Carleton College)

From Cathy Yandell at Carleton College:


Nous sommes très heureux de vous inviter, vous et vos étudiants, à la conférence de Maryse Condé à Carleton, suivie d'une discussion avec l'auteure.


Maryse Condé, dont vous connaissez probablement l'oeuvre, a publié plus de 20 romans dont Ségou; Moi Tituba, Sorcière; Traversée de la mangrove; Windward Heights (une version cubaine/guadeloupéenne du roman célèbre de Brontë), ainsi que l'oeuvre autobiographique Le coeur à rire et à pleurer. Elle a reçu de nombreux prix littéraires -- le Grand Prix du roman métis (2010), le Prix Marguerite Yourcenar (1999), et le Prix de l'Académie française (1988), entre autres.
Maryse Condé, "Journey of a Caribbean Writer"
le mercredi 20 avril, 19h30
Carleton College, Boliou 104
Pour arriver à Carleton, prenez la 35W vers le sud jusqu'à la route 19 (sortie 69), et allez vers l'est (à gauche). Une fois arrivé à Northfield, continuez tout droit après le feu rouge; vous serez dans la 5e rue. Continuez jusqu'à la rue Winona où vous tournez à gauche jusqu'à ce que la rue devienne un parking (vous pouvez vous y garer). Si vous continuez à pied toujours vers le nord, vous verrez un grand bâtiment à colonnes (Laird). Boliou est juste à droite, un petit bâtiment moderne couleur de sable.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Lectures: "Alternative Narratives or Denial? " (Wed 4/13, 4pm, Humphrey Forum)

Featuring Two Lectures:

"Godard's Wars"
Philip Watts, Associate Professor of French, Department Chair, Columbia University

"Thoughts on Giorgio Agamben's Remnants of Auschwitz: The Witness and the Archive"
Jeffrey Mehlman, Professor of French, Department of Romance Studies, College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University

Godard's Wars
Philip Watts, Associate Professor of French, Department Chair, Columbia University
There has been much controversy about French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard's relation to the Jews and the Holocaust. Godard was recently accused of anti-Semitism. Philip Watts will return to this recent affair by focusing on Godard's filmic representation of WWII, the Middle East conflict and the Holocaust.
Thoughts on Giorgio Agamben's Remnants of Auschwitz: The Witness and the Archive
Jeffrey Mehlman, Professor of French, Department of Romance Studies, College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University
Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben has argued in several books that the concentration camp has become the paradigm of our life in modern, liberal democracies. His work has a vast influence on many different fields and disciplines: legal scholarship, social sciences (especially political science), and literary studies in the US, Europe and beyond.
Jeffrey Mehlman will examine the perils engaged and not always avoided when Italy's pre-eminent philosopher, perched between Heidegger and Benjamin, Foucault and Arendt, hurls the pre-eminent discourses of European modernity at the pre-eminent catastrophe of the twentieth century in what never quite coheres as the pre-eminent epistemological encounter of modern times.
Sponsored by Sponsored by: Holocaust & Genocide Studies, Human Rights Program, German, Scandinavian & Dutch, Cultural Studies & Comparative Literature, French & Italian
For more information, please contact the Center for Genocide and Holocaust Studies
* Name: Laura Lechner
* E-mail: lech0045@umn.edu
* Phone: 612-624-0256