澳门六合彩开奖记录

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澳门六合彩开奖记录

Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics

 

Dr Emma Claussen

Dr Emma Claussen
Position(s): 
Trinity College Assistant Professor
Affiliated Lecturer
Department/Section: 
French
Faculty of Modern & Medieval Languages & Linguistics
Contact details: 
College: 
Location: 

Faculty of Modern and听Medieval Languages and Linguistics Raised Faculty Building 澳门六合彩开奖记录 Sidgwick Avenue 澳门六合彩开奖记录 CB3 9DA United Kingdom

About: 

Emma did her undergraduate degree at Worcester College, Oxford and an MA at KCL, before returning to Oxford for a D.Phil in French at St John鈥檚. She then held a Career Development Fellowship at New College, Oxford (2016-19), before coming to 澳门六合彩开奖记录 as a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow (2019-23), during which time she was also a Visiting Scholar at Columbia University. She joined Trinity College in 2023.

Teaching interests: 

Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century literature;听twentieth-century literature;听theatre; translation; critical theory

Research interests: 

Early modern French literature and thought; political language and politics; theatre; critical theory; intellectual history and the history of science; humanism (early modern and modern); Edward W. Said

Recent research projects: 

Emma works at the intersection of literary criticism and the history of ideas. Her first book is Politics and Politiques in Sixteenth-Century France: A Conceptual History (澳门六合彩开奖记录, 2021). It examines uses of the word 鈥榩olitique鈥 and changing conceptions of politics during the Wars of Religion (1562-98). Read more about this work .

贰尘尘补鈥檚 in the sixteenth century, using Montaigne as a case study, was named runner up in both the Forum Prize (2021) and the Malcolm Bowie Prize (2022).听

Good and bad politics were (and are) often framed in terms of good and bad lives. Emma is now working on representations of life and living in France, especially where natural-physical accounts of 鈥榖eing alive鈥 are implicated in moral and narrative accounts of 鈥榓 life鈥. Her current book project, Surviving the Renaissance explores this topic in French literature between c. 1550-1650. This work focuses on live as survival in difficult circumstances: in war, illness, old age, unrequited love, etc. In other words, it considers the 鈥榖ad life鈥 that is the foil to the good. 贰尘尘补鈥檚 received the Richard Parish Prize in 2023.

To hear Emma speak on the CRASSH 鈥楾houghtlines鈥 Podcast about the 鈥榣anguishing life鈥 of early modernity, and its resonance in the present, listen :

This project has led to the development of a second project, provisionally entitled 鈥楺ualities of Life in Pre-Modernity鈥, analyzing how writers, thinkers, and scientists conceived of life and its qualities in a broader time period (c.1500-1800), and asking how well-being was understood before the rise of social science.

Overall, Emma is interested in how pre-modern ideas connect with modern and contemporary ones. This is not only part of her work on life, survival, and the good life, but also part of a connected project on how twentieth-century humanism was conceived with and against the pre-modern, especially in the work of Edward W. Said, whose archive she researched as Edward. W. Said Fellow at Columbia University in Spring 2023.

Emma has been involved in many collaborative projects, including 鈥楻enaissance Conservations鈥 (with Simon Park, Oxford) and 鈥楨arly Modern Keywords鈥 (run by Ita Mac Carthy and Richard Scholar, both at Durham). From 2016-19 she was a co-organiser of 鈥楩ribOx鈥, a network between the universities of Oxford and Fribourg. More recently she worked with Luca Zenobi (澳门六合彩开奖记录) on a project on on 鈥楩iction and Disinformation in Early Modern Europe, which was published as a Supplement of Past and Present in 2022, and on 鈥榳riting life鈥 in pre-modern English and French texts with Emily Kate Price (澳门六合彩开奖记录).

Published works: 

1. Books听 听 (in progress): Surviving the Renaissance: Life and Living in Early Modern France

Politics and Politiques in Sixteenth-Century France: A Conceptual History (澳门六合彩开奖记录: 澳门六合彩开奖记录 University Press, 2021)

2. Peer-Reviewed Articles听听 听

with Luca Zenobi, 鈥業ntroduction鈥, in Beyond Truth: Fiction and (Dis)information in Early Modern Europe, ed. by Emma Claussen and Luca Zenobi [=Past and Present Supplement] Past & Present, 257 (2022), 1鈥35 听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听

听鈥樷淓st-ce vivre?鈥 The Politics of Living in Montaigne and La Bo茅tie鈥, Early Modern French Studies, 44.1 (2022) Available on open access:

听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听

鈥樷淧eu de vigueur et point d鈥檃rt鈥: Les Vies (Non)-Vertueuses de II,11, 鈥淒e la cruaut茅鈥, Bulletin de la Soci茅t茅 des amis de Montaigne, 74 (2022), 167-85

鈥楳ontaigne鈥檚 Vagabond Styles: Political 澳门六合彩开奖记录lessness in the Sixteenth Century鈥, Forum for Modern Language Studies, 57.3 (2021), 273-90

听鈥榃hat Remains: Athalie鈥檚 Futures鈥, French Studies, 74.3 (2020), 349-56.

鈥業ntraduisible, ou traduction infid猫le? Le mot 鈥榩olitique鈥, 1560-1600鈥, Litt茅ratures classiques, 96 (2018/2), 27-39

鈥樷淰ilain et d茅shonn锚te鈥: Villainy in anti-Politique polemic at the end of the French Wars of Religion鈥, in 鈥榁ile Beings鈥, ed. by Jonathan Patterson and Emilia Wilton-Godberfforde, Early Modern French Studies, 39. 2 (2017), 157-168

鈥楢 Sixteenth-Century Modern? Ancients and Moderns in Loys Le Roy鈥檚 De la Vicissitude鈥, Early Modern French Studies, 37.2 (2015), 76-92

3. Edited Journal听

Beyond Truth: Fiction and (Dis)information in Early Modern Europe, ed. by Emma Claussen and Luca Zenobi, [= Past and Present Supplement] Past & Present, 257 (2022)听 听听听 听听听 听听听 听