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March 2017

Wed Mar 29

“Acadian French in Contact: Connecting the Past and the Present”. A lecture by Ruth King (York University, Toronto Canada)

3:00 PM

Wednesday, March  29 , 2017 3-4pm, Pugh Hall 210 Professor of Linguistics at York University in Toronta, Canada, Ruth King has published widely on grammatical variation and change in contemporary French varieties and on the sociolinguistic history of the language. Her research areas include language and dialect contact, minority language varieties in the media and language and identity. Abstract Acadian French refers to varieties of French spoken in Canada’s four Atlantic Provinces and in parts of eastern Québec. In this…

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June 2017

Thu Jun 01

“Another Rousseau. Re-imagining a Writer using his Silences”. Keynote lecture by Michael O’Dea (Université Lyon II)

5:00 PM

Thursday, June 1, 2017 5pm, Ulster Hall Michael O’Dea is Emeritus Professor of French at the Université Lyon II (France) and is a specialist of Rousseau and music. His latest publications include the edited volumes Rousseau en 2012. Puisqu’enfin mon nom doit vivre. SVEC 2012:1; Rousseau en musique, co-edited with P. Saby and O. Bara as a special issue of Orages, littérature et culture 1760-1830 (2012) and Rousseau et les philosophes, SVEC 2010:2. On June 1 at 5pm, he will…

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October 2019

Mon Oct 21

Inscribing the Self on the Small Screen: How Marguerite Duras Put Literature on TV

4:00 PM - Library East (Smathers)

Some of the most well-known intellectuals of 20th-century France have warned of the dangers of television to thought, to society and to the book. However, Marguerite Duras, a prominent writer and public intellectual, made use of the television as an extension of her literary project. As both an interviewer on state funded television shows during the postwar period, and later as a major cultural celebrity being interviewed herself, Duras foregrounds both her writerly persona and her public image in order…

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Mon Oct 28

Blackness in French

4:00 PM - https://ufl.zoom.us/j/96078124051

Mame Fatou Niang is Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research focuses on contemporary France, Sub-Saharan Africa, Postcolonial and Transnational Studies, Media, and Urban Planning. She is the author of Identités Françaises (Brill 2019) which examines the development of Afro-French identities and the works of second- and third-generation female immigrant writers of the banlieue. In 2015 she has co-directed Mariannes Noires: Mosaïques Afropéennes in which seven Afro-French women reflects on what it means to…

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November 2019

Wed Nov 13

Les Belles au bois dormant with Dr. Trinquet du Lys and Dr. Bloom

3:00 PM - https://ufl.zoom.us/j/96078124051

Dialogue around “Les Belles au bois dormant” with Dr. Charlotte Trinquet du Lys (University of Central Florida) and Dr. Rori Bloom (University of Florida) Dialogue in French with discussion in French and/or English Taking inspiration from Charles Perrault’s late seventeenth-century fairy tale, “La Belle au Bois dormant,” Drs. Trinquet and Bloom will explore several versions of the “Sleeping Beauty” story, including Italian sources and French variations on the theme. Their aim is to treat a familiar, classic text in order…

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Mon Nov 18

Vodou Inscriptions of the Self in Zora Neale Hurston’s Haitian Ethnography

3:00 PM - https://ufl.zoom.us/j/96078124051

Zora Neale Hurston’s 1938 book, Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica, recounts her two years of fieldwork research on African-derived religions and other cultural practices in the Caribbean.  Though it has received plenty of attention since being republished in 1990, Tell My Horse is still Hurston’s most complicated, least understood book. Her inscriptions of self are frequently debated in conflicting scholarly assessments and in this talk, Dr. Meehan tries to make sense of Tell My Horse…

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February 2020

Wed Feb 26

Orleans & Montreal in Real Time: 40 Years of Variation in Spoken French

5:00 PM - https://ufl.zoom.us/j/96078124051

Join us for a round table discussion in French of Montréal and Orléans over the decades. This event will be hosted at the Scott Nygren Studio located in Library West. It is free and open to the public. SPEAKERS Lotfi Abouda, Université d’Orléans Katja Ploog,Université d’Orléans Mireille Tremblay, Université de Montréal

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November 2021

Fri Nov 19

Francophone Artists, Bandes Dessinées and Diasporic Graphics

1:55 PM - https://ufl.zoom.us/j/96078124051

Dr. Anna Giaufret (University of Genoa, Italy) will present her new book Montréal dans les bulles Dr. Giaufret is Associate Professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Cultures at the University of Genoa. After her Ph.D. in Francophone Studies at the University of Bologna, she taught at the Universities of Ferrara and Verona in Italy . Her research interests encompass Québec French, Comics, Francophone Sociolinguistics, Terminology, Discourses Analysis and Memorial Studies. She recently published a new book 'Montréal dans…

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October 2022

Mon Oct 17

Challenging the myth of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ French: Norm(s) and socio-stylistic variation in Quebec

4:00 PM

Dr. Anne-José Villeneuve (University of Alberta, Canada) will present her sociolinguistic research on language variation in Québec French.

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Free

February 2023

Fri Feb 10

“Masquerade as Theatre in Francophonie: Africa, the Caribbean and France”: A Presentation by Dr. Ron Popenhagen

3:00 PM - Library East (Smathers) Room 100

The France-Florida Institute is delighted to welcome Dr. Ron Popenhagen to the University of Florida on February 10, 2023 at 3pm in Library East (Smathers) Room 100 for a presentation “Masquerade as Theatre in Francophonie: Africa, the Caribbean and France” as a part of the 2022-2023 FFRI Theater Revival/Le renouveau théâtral project.

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February 2024

Thu Feb 01

An Alternative Digital Humanities: Modeling and Simulation in the VESPACE Project, Guest lecture by Jeffrey Leichman (Louisiana State University)

4:00 PM - Scott Nygren Scholars Studio (second floor Library West)

  Jeffrey M. Leichman is William Boizelle Associate Professor in the Department of French Studies at Louisiana State University, and Director of the LSU Center for French and Francophone Studies, a member of the Centers of Excellence Network designated by the cultural services of the French Embassy. Professor Leichman is a scholar of theatre and performance, with a disciplinary focus on the global reach of French-language stage practices during the long eighteenth century, as well as modeling and simulation applications…

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