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October 5: Rage, Folie, Désespoir: Excess and the Passions in Early Modern France (1550-1715)
October 23: Rich Stews: Food, Culture, and Literature: Symposium in honor of the late the late Alex Szogyi
November 1: Louisette Ighilahriz: Woman Against General: Torture, Rape and Time
November 2: Mary C. Rawlinson: Agent of Fraternity: How Feminism misreads (Hegel's) Antigone
November 13: Hamid Bahri: Fissured Identities: Fathers, Daughters and Sons in the Francophone North African Novel
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Friday, October 5 at 10:00am-8:30pm
The French Interdisciplinary Group for Seventeenth-Century Studies presents:
Rage, Folie, Désespoir: Excess and the Passions in Early Modern France (1550-1715)
The theoretical construction known as French Classicism has traditionally been characterized by what René Bray termed "le culte de la raison," which Jean Rohou describes as a "large et profonde aspiration, sur tous les plans, à une discipline à la fois constructive et répressive: absolutisme, rationalisme, moralisme, classicisme." On the surface, seventeenth-century representations of the passions do exhibit a codified propriety. But, as La Rochefoucauld observes, "Les passions sont dangereuses lors même qu'elles paroissent le plus raisonnables," and in order to depict the passions in a "rational" and universally understood manner, they were frequently portrayed in dramatically exaggerated fashions. This conference will explore the early modern fascination with "Baroque" notions of excess, violence, uncontrollable impulse, and extravagant passion.
Professor Roxanne Roy (Université du Québec) will be the keynote speaker, and the period instruments ensemble La Musique de la Reine will perform vocal and instrumental works of 17th- and 18th-century France.
Sponsored by
The French Interdisciplinary Group for Seventeenth-Century Studies
The Ph.D. Program in French
The Henri Peyre French Institute
The C.U.N.Y. Doctoral Students' Counci
For additional information, please visit the conference website: http://web.gc.cuny.edu/French/events/passionconference.html |
Tuesday, October 23, 2007, from 11 AM to 5 PM
Rich Stews: Food, Culture, and Literature: Symposium in honor of the late the late Alex Szogyi
On Tuesday, October 23, 2007, from 11 AM to 5 PM, the Ph.D. Program in French and the Henri Peyre French Institute at The Graduate Center of CUNY will convene a Symposium entitled Rich Stews: Food, Culture, and Literature.
The Memorial begins at 6 PM.
This colloquium is part of a Memorial in honor of the late Alex Szogyi, professor of many years at CUNY, who was a widely known 17th-century scholar, specializing in the theater of Racine and the work of La Fontaine, as well as a translator, food critic and historian and a talented concert pianist. Among his many accomplishments, Professor Szogyi edited a volume on the history and representation of chocolate –Chocolate: Food of the Gods (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997). This colloquium, held at The Graduate Center from 12 to 5, on October 23rd, commemorates his work in the field of food history.
Colloquium conveners: Professor Jeanine Parisier Plottel and Professor Francesca Canadé Sautman.
Martin Segal Theatre
The Graduate Center of the City University of New York is located at 365 5th avenue (intersection of 34th street and 5th avenue) in Manhattan.
For further information about the Commemoration on October 23rd, contact the conveners or call 212-817-8365.
Conference Program
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Thursday, November 1, 2007 at 4:00-6:00 pm
Louisette Ighilahriz, Woman Against General: Torture, Rape and Time
Louisette Ighilahriz, author, former combatant during the Algerian War, Feminist
Louisette Ighilahriz was captured by French paratroopers in 1957, subjected to torture and rape for 11 weeks before being sent to jail.
She broke silence on her rape in 2001 in a book, Algérienne, that raised a political storm in France and led to a lawsuit against a former torturer, General Schmitt.
Louisette Ighilahriz will share her long years of quiet suffering and desperation, her decision to go public, and her continued struggle for women’s right to speak their conscience.
Room 9206-9207
Co-sponsored by The Women’s Studies Certificate Program, Ph.D. Program in French, Ralph Bunche Institute, and Ph.D. Program in Sociology, at The Graduate Center, and the Human Rights Program, Women and Gender Studies Program, and Sociology Department, at Hunter College of CUNY.
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Friday, November 2, 2007 at 4:30-6:00 pm.
Agent of Fraternity: How Feminism misreads (Hegel's) Antigone
A talk by Mary C. Rawlinson, Professor of Comparative Literature and Philosophy, SUNY Stony Brook
Professor Rawlinson is a specialist of recent French philosophy, the philosophy of literature, aesthetics, French feminism, nineteenth-century philosophy, the philosophy of medicine, and Proust.
She is the author of Medicine: Science of the Individual (Kluwer, 2004), the editor of Breasts and Medicine (Kluwer, 2004) and the co-editor of Derrida and Feminism: Recasting the Question of Woman (Routledge, 1997) and The Voice of Breast Cancer in Medicine and Bioethics (Springer, 2006). She has also edited five issues of the Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, including Foucault and the Philosophy of Medicine, The Future of Psychiatry, and Feminist Bioethics.
Martin Segal Theatre
Sponsored by The Ph.D. Program in French and the Certificate Program in Women’s Studies
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Thursday, November 13, 2007, 6:30-8:30 pm
Fissured Identities: Fathers, Daughters and Sons in the Francophone North African Novel
a talk by
Hamid Bahri, Assistant Professor of French at York College.
Room 9204
Reception to Follow.
Sponsored by the Middle East & Middle Eastern American Center of the Graduate Center, CUNY
Co-sponsored with the Ph.D. Program in French
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