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Events and Activities
- 2007
Energy Flow Dynamics in Biomaterial Systems
October 2-5, 2007
Organized by David Micha (University of Florida, Physics), Irene Burghardt
(Ecole Normale Supérieure), Eric Bittner (University of Houston),
and Volkhard May (Humboldt-Universitaet Berlin, Germany), this
exciting international conference, the second of the “Quantum Dynamics” series
hosted at the PRC, welcomed over 40 leading scholars from nine countries
across the globe.
Participants Included: Federica Agostini
(Universita di Roma, Italy), Biman Bagchi (Indian Institute of
Science, India), William Barford (Oxford University, UK), Victor
Batista (Yale University), Sara Bonella (Universita di Roma, Italy),
Daniel Borgis (Universite d'Evry, France), Steve Bradforth (University
of Southern California), Alexandra Olaya Castro (University of Oxford,
UK), Giovanni Ciccotti (Universita di Roma, Italy), David Coker
(Boston University), Gianaurelio Cuniberti (University of Regensburg,
Germany), Dassia Egorova (Technical University Munich, Germany), Francesca
Fassioli-Olsen (Oxford University, UK), Hiroshi Fujisaki (University
of Frankfurt, Germany), Sophya Garashchuk (University of South Carolina),
Marco Garavelli (Universita di Bologna, Italy), Eitan Geva (University
of Michigan), Anne Goj (University of Houston), Emmanuelle Hennebicq
(University of Mons Hainaut, Belgium), Laura Herz (University
of Oxford, UK), Casey Hynes (ENS Paris, France), Francesca Ingrosso
(ENS Paris, France), Raymond Kapral (University of Toronto, Canada),
Ulrich Kleinekathofer (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany), Oliver Kuehn
(Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany), Zhenggang Lan (Technical University
Munich, Germany), Andrew Leathers (University of Florida), Dimitra
Markovitsi (Laboratoire Francis Perrin, CEA, France), Shaul Mukamel
(University of Califoria at Irvine), Eran Rabani (University of Tel
Aviv, Israel), Suyong Re (ENS Paris, France), Peter Rossky (University
of Texas at Austin), Peter Saalfrank (University of Potsdam, Germany),
Greg Scholes (University of Toronto), Carlos Silva (Universite de Montreal,
Canada), Masanori Tachiya (AIST, Japan), Hiroyuki Tamura (ENS Paris,
France), Yoshitaka Tanimura (Kyoto University, Japan), Michael Thoss
(Technical University Munich, Germany), Oriol Vendrell (University
of Heidelberg, Germany), Hui Zhu (Humboldt-Universitaet Berlin, Germany.
Cultural Production in the 19th Century: Intersections, Collaborations, Confidences
May 31-June 1, 2007
See Program Agenda (PDF)
The Paris Research Center is pleased to present "Cultural Production in the 19th Century: Intersections, Collaborations, Confidences", the third edition of the annual PRC workshop series in French Studies, organized by Gayle Zachmann (Paris Research Center) and Charles Stivale (Wayne State University). The two-day conference welcomes scholars from around the United States and Europe.
Participants include: Xavier Bourdenet, (Université de Franche- Comté ); Vincent DuClerc, (EHESS); Elizabeth Emery, (Montclair State University); Lucienne Frappier-Mazur, (University of Pennsylvania); Françoise Gaillard, (Université de Paris VII); Melanie Hawthorne, (Texas A & M University); Elisabeth Ladenson, (Columbia University) ; Marshall Olds (University of Nebraska); Jaymes Ann Rohrer, (Randolph College); Jean-Marie Roulin, (Université Jean Monnet, St. Etienne); Richard Shryock, (Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University); Sonya Stephens, (Indiana University); Charles J. Stivale, (Wayne State University); Gayle Zachmann, (University of Florida)
Guest Lectures – International Affairs and the Public Sphere
Fall 2007 Program
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Lt. Colonel Christian D. Chapman
"A Multidisciplinary Approach
to International Relations"
Christian Chapman is a Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Army
who has spent 10 of his 16 years of service working overseas. He
is currently serving as a Defense Policy Advisor in the United States
Mission to NATO.
Lieutenant
Colonel Chapman is a graduate of the French Joint Defense College and
holds an M.A. in National Security Affairs from the Naval Postgraduate
School and a B.S. from the United States Military Academy. He
was originally commissioned as an Armor Officer and was stationed in
South Korea, Texas and Germany before becoming a Foreign Area Officer,
specializing in Europe. In this capacity Lieutenant Colonel Chapman
has been stationed in the Defense Attaché Office in Belgium; in
France as the Training and Doctrine Liaison Officer to the French Army;
and in his current assignment as a Defense Policy Advisor in the US Mission
to NATO.
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Professor Daniel Maximin
"On the Cultural Context of French Decolonization"
Daniel Maximin, born in Guadeloupe, is a poet, novelist, and essayist. He
is the author of three novels, L’ISOLÉ SOLEIL (1981), SOUFRIERES
(1987), and L’ÎLE ET UNE NUIT (1996); a volume of poetry, L’INVENTION
DES DESIRADES (2000); an autobiographical work, TU, C’EST
L’ENFANCE, (2004), for which he won Grand prix Maurice Genevoix
de l’Académie Française ; and of the essay LES FRUITS
DU CYCLONE, Une géopoétique de la Caraïbe. (2006).
Daniel Maximin was Director of Cultural Affairs of Guadeloupe from 1989
to 1997. He was named the Responsable Littérature et Éducation
of the Francophone francoffonies Festival in 2006. In 2007, he
was named to l'Inspection Générale de l'Administration
du Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication.
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Ms. Adrian Leeds
"Seventeen Things I Wish I Had Known before I Moved
to Paris"
Adrian Leeds, Editor of the Parler Paris newsletter, is a marketing,
public relations and communications expert, published author and journalist,
restaurant critic, event coordinator, language learning professional,
and an expert in French property investing.
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Mr. Mort Rosenblum
"Escaping Plato’s Cave: How America`s Blindness
to the Rest of the World Threatens Our Survival"
Mort Rosenblum, journalist, author and educator, enjoyed a distinguished
career of over 40 years as a foreign correspondent for the Associated
Press. In 1967 the AP sent him to cover mercenary wars in Congo,
and since then he has written from 200 countries. In 1989, he won the
Overseas Press Club award and was short-listed for a Pulitzer for the
fall of Romania. He won the AP's top reporting award in 1990, 2000 and
2001. Mr. Rosenblum left the AP in 2004 and now writes independently. He
has written 12 books and contributed to Foreign Affairs, Vanity Fair,
the New York Review of Books, Le Nouvel Observateur, Travel & Leisure,
and Bon Appetit, among others. Mr. Rosenblum is a member of the Council
on Foreign Relations, where he was the 1980 Edward R. Morrow fellow.
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Professor Daniel Maximin
“Thinking Culture: An Introduction to the Ministry
of Culture and Communication"
Daniel Maximin, born in Guadeloupe, is a poet, novelist, and essayist. He
is the author of three novels, L’ISOLÉ SOLEIL (1981), SOUFRIERES
(1987), and L’ÎLE ET UNE NUIT (1996); a volume of poetry, L’INVENTION
DES DESIRADES (2000); an autobiographical work, TU, C’EST
L’ENFANCE, (2004), for which he won Grand prix Maurice Genevoix
de l’Académie Française ; and of the essay LES FRUITS
DU CYCLONE, Une géopoétique de la Caraïbe. (2006).
Daniel Maximin was Director of Cultural Affairs of Guadeloupe from 1989
to 1997. He was named the Responsable Littérature et Éducation
of the Francophone francoffonies Festival in 2006. In 2007, he
was named to l'Inspection Générale de l'Administration
du Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication.
Distinguished
Guest Lecturer: Ambassador William Ramsay
"Energy Policy Challenges: The International
Energy Agency Perspective"
William Ramsay is deputy executive director of the International Energy
Agency in Paris and director of its relations with non-member countries.
He was formerly deputy assistant secretary for international energy issues,
economic and foreign policy sanctions, and strategic commodities for
the United States Department of State in Washington, DC. Ambassador Ramsay
previously served as US Ambassador to the Republic of Congo, principal
US negotiator for the North American Free Trade Agreement for energy
and petrochemical issues, and economic/commercial officer in Kinshasa
and in Abidjan. He served in the Office of Fuels and Energy in Washington,
DC, and subsequently in the US delegation to the European Community in
Brussels with responsibilities for policies on commodities, energy and
nuclear policy. He was deputy chief of the US Liaison Mission in Riyadh,
and economic counselor in the Embassy there before serving again in Washington
as director of the office that formulated and oversaw implementation
of US international energy policy. Ambassador Ramsay is a graduate of
Michigan State University, where he received B.A. and M.A. degrees, and
Stanford University, where he received a graduate degree in international
economics.
Guest Lecture at the European Commission with Agnes Hubert
“Fifty Years of Gender Equality in the European Union”
Back
from a 2 years secondment to the European Parliament, this ex-member
of the Forward Studies Unit and of the Governance team, joined BEPA in
December 2004.
After having graduated in Economics and in Political Science
from the University of Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne), she
became an economic journalist. She joined the European Commission
in 1981 where she has held responsibilities in 3 fields: Development & cooperation
(international commodity agreements); information & communication
(information Europe – 1/3 world) and social & employment
policy (head of the Unit Equal Opportunities for Women).
She is the author of two books (“L’Europe et les
femmes, identities en movement”, ed. Apogée, and co-author
of “Democracy and Information Society in Europe”, in Forward
Studies series – Kogan page), and numerous articles and academic
contributions.
In 1998-99, she was a “European Union Fellow” in
Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy (Tufts University, Mass. USA). She
developed a seminar on the “EU and Gender”.
NATO Lectures
Mr. James Snyder and Mr. Briian Greaney,
"Current NATO Political Issues"
Ms. Rebecca Ross,
"The Perspective of the US Mission to NATO"
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is an alliance of
26 countries from North America and Europe committed to fulfilling
the goals of the North Atlantic Treaty signed on 4 April 1949. In accordance
with the Treaty, the fundamental role of NATO is to safeguard the freedom
and security of its member countries by political and military means.
NATO safeguards the Allies’ common values of democracy, individual
liberty, the rule of law and the peaceful resolution of disputes, and
promotes these values throughout the Euro-Atlantic area.
The Alliance embodies the transatlantic link by which the security
of North America and Europe are permanently tied together. It is the
practical expression of effective collective effort among its members
in support of their common interests. NATO provides a forum in which
the United States, Canada and European countries can consult together
on security issues of common concern and take joint action in addressing
them.
Mr. Jean-Pierre Giovenco, Secretary General, Supplemental
Edition, Le Monde “An Introduction to Le Monde”
Jean-Pierre Giovenco is the secretary-general of the
Supplementary edition of Le Monde a French daily evening newspaper with
a circulation in 2004 of 371,803. It is considered the French newspaper
of record, and is generally well respected, often the only French newspaper
easily obtainable in non-Francophone countries.
It was founded by Hubert Beuve-Méry at the request of General
Charles de Gaulle after the German army was driven from Paris during
World War II, and took over the format of Le Temps, whose reputation
had suffered during the Occupation. Beuve-Méry reportedly demanded
total editorial independence as the condition for his taking on the
project. Its first edition appeared on December 19, 1944. Le Monde
has been available on the Internet since December 19, 1995. It is the
principal publication of Groupe Le Monde.
Mr. Paolo Moscovici, Director, JP Morgan Private Bank
“An Introduction to JP Morgan Private Bank”
Mr. Paolo Moscovici, is Managing Director France of JP Morgan France
Private Bank (JP Morgan Chase & Co).
Paolo Moscovici has worked at JP Morgan since 1977. After working various
functions in the investment banks of New York, Rome, and Milan, he created
the SPECIALISTE EN VALEURS DU TRESOR activity for JP Morgan Paris and
then rejoined the Private Bank. For many years, he assured the direction
of JP Morgan Private Bank for Great Britain and Italy.
Lecture with Mrs. Marion Tucker-Venter at UNESCO
“An Introduction to UNESCO”
Mrs. Marion Tucker-Venter is the chief contact at the UNESCO Visitor
Service. She arranges guided visits (in English or Spanish), film showings
about UNESCO, and various presentations on the role of the organization
as well as information about the concerts, expositions, and conferences
held there.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations established
on 16 November 1945. Its stated purpose is to contribute to peace and
security by promoting international collaboration through education,
science, and culture in order to further universal respect for justice,
the rule of law, and the human rights and fundamental freedoms proclaimed
in the UN Charter. It is the heir of the League of Nations' International
Commission on Intellectual Cooperation.
UNESCO has 193 Member States and 6 Associate Members. The organization
is based in Paris, with over 50 field offices and many specialized
institutes and centers throughout the world. Most of the field offices
are "cluster" offices covering three or more countries; there
are also national and regional offices. UNESCO pursues its action through
five major programs: education, natural sciences, social and human
sciences, culture, and communication and information. Projects sponsored
by UNESCO include literacy, technical, and teacher-training programs;
international science programs; the promotion of independent media
and freedom of the press; regional and cultural history projects, the
promotion of cultural diversity; international cooperation agreements
to secure the world cultural and natural heritage and to preserve human
rights; and attempts to bridge the world-wide digital divide.
Lecture at OECD with Meggan Dissly,
Civil Society Coordinator, & Linda Aidan, Visits Coordinator, Public
Affairs Division, Public Affairs and Communications Directorate, OECD
The OECD brings together the governments of countries committed to democracy
and the market economy from around the world to:
- Support sustainable economic growth
- Boost employment
- Raise living standards
- Maintain financial stability
- Assist other countries' economic development
- Contribute to growth in world trade
The OECD
also shares expertise and exchanges views with more than 100
other countries and economies, from Brazil, China, and
Russia to the least developed countries in Africa.
Distinguished Guest Lecturers: Nicole Pruneaux and Norbert Skurnik
“The Free Masons in France"
Freemasonry is a fraternal organisation that arose from obscure origins
(theorised to be anywhere from the time of the building of King Solomon's
Temple to the mid-1600s). Freemasonry now exists in various forms all
over the world, and has millions of members. The various forms all share
moral and metaphysical ideals, which include, in most cases, a constitutional
declaration of belief in a Supreme Being.
The fraternity is administratively organised into Grand Lodges (or sometimes
Orients), each of which governs its own jurisdiction, which consists
of subordinate (or constituent) Lodges. Grand Lodges recognise each other
through a process of landmarks and regularity. There are also appendant
bodies, which are organisations related to the main branch of Freemasonry,
but with their own independent administration.
Freemasonry uses the metaphors of operative stonemasons' tools and implements,
against the allegorical backdrop of the building of King Solomon's Temple,
to convey what has been described as "a system of morality veiled
in allegory and illustrated by symbols."
Guest Lectures – Honors in Paris 2007 Program - The Twentieth
Century: Modern French Literature and the Quest for the Sacred
Distinguished guest lecturer: Sébastien
Fath, CNRS
Protestants
and Politics in France from 1905 to the Present
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Download Flyer (pdf)
A specialist in the study of Evangelical Protestantism, Sebastien Fath
is currently a full-time researcher at the National Center for Scientific
Research (CNRS). He lectures at Sorbonne University (Ecole Pratique des
Hautes Etudes), and is in charge of a scientific research program on
contemporary mutations of religion in Western societies. He is the author
of ten books and has recently published Dieu bénisse l'Amérique.
La religion de la Maison Blanche (Paris: Seuil, 2004), Militants de la
Bible aux Etats-Unis. Evangéliques et fondamentalistes du Sud
(Paris: Autrement, 2004. This book was awarded the Chateaubriand History
Prize), and Du ghetto au réseau. Le protestantisme évangélique
en France 1800-2005 , ( Geneva : Labor et Fides, 2005).
Distinguished guest lecturer: Ziad Elmarsafy, University of York
"The
Varieties of French Muslim Experience"
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Download Flyer (pdf)
Ziad Elmarsafy was born in Egypt, raised in Kuwait and schooled in the
USA. He received a degree in Physics at Cornell before completing degrees
in French literature at Johns Hopkins (MA) and Emory University (PhD).
He has taught at the University of California, Wellesley College, New
York University and is now teaching at University of York in the Department
of English and Related Literatures.
Distinguished guest lecturer: Rabbi Daniel Farhi, MJLF
"Judaism
in France"
Wednesday, April 23, 2007
Download Flyer (pdf)
Rabbi Daniel FARHI was born in Paris in 1941 of Turkish-Jewish parents.
Hidden by a Protestant family during World War II, he pursued his rabbincal
studies from 1959 to 1966. He received his ordination in February of
1966. Following his French military service, he was appointed rabbi at
the Union Libérale Israélite de France synagogue at Rue
Copernic. He became the Senior rabbi there in 1970. On June 2, 1977,
he created the MJLF with about fifty families and has been senior Rabbi
ever since. Daniel Farhi has centered his rabbinic career around four
principal orientations: the spiritual and pastoral leadership of his
community; the spreading of the theory and practice of Reform Judaism;dialogue
with Christians and Muslims; defending the memory of the Shoah along
side Serge and Beate Klarsfeld. Rabbi Farhi was imprisoned in Germany
for having demonstrated in favor of the condemnation of Nazi criminal.
He has organized eight “pilgrimages” to Auschwitz. In 1990,
he introduced on Yom haShoah (the first time ever in France) a 24-hour
public reading of the names of Jews deported from this country. Each
year this event attracts hundreds of participants.
He was named Chevalier of the Ordre National du Mérite in 1988.
In 1993, he was again honored as Chevalier in the Ordre National de La
Légion d'Honneur with Minister of State Simone Veil presiding.
Editorial advisor of MJLF's magazine Le Mouvement/Tenoua, Daniel Farhi
is also the author of two prayer-books ( Siddour Taher Libenou and Mahzor
Anenou ) and of several other works including: Parler aux enfants d'Israël
; Un Judaïsme dans le siècle ; Au dernier survivant.
Guest Lectures and Jury Participants – Landscape Architecture
Fall 2007 Program at the PRC
- Adèle Robert, Director of Pedagogy, Musée
des Arts Décoratifs.
- Ariela Katz, Director, Columbia University Graduate
School of Architecture Planning and Preservation, Paris
- Jean-Pierre
Le Dantec, Professor of Landscape History,
Ecole d’Architecture
de Paris La Villette.
- Stanley Hallett, Professor of
Architecture/ Urbanism, Catholic University, Paris
Program
- Mikael Mugnier, Landscape Architect, Agence
Jacqueline Osty
- Maxine Schnadelbach, Architect, Critic-at-Large,
Paris, New York, Gainesville
- R. Terry Schnadelbach,
Professor of Landscape Architecture, Paris Research Center, University
of Florida
Guest Lectures – Summer 2007 Programs
Distinguished Guest Lecturer: Holly Fisher, Filmmaker
Holly Fisher (producer, director, camera, editor) has been active since
the mid-sixties as independent filmmaker, teacher, and editor of feature
documentaries including 1989 Academy Award nominee "Who Killed Vincent
Chin?". She received her BA Degree in Chinese Art History from Columbia
University in 1964, and an MA in Cinema Studies from New York University
in 1980. From 1966-71 she collaborated on cinema verité documentaries
with a focus on political and environmental issues. Her first documentary,
Progress, Pork-barrel, and Pheasant Feathers, 1966, won a blue ribbon
for conservation at the Educational Film Library Film Festival (EFLA).
She
has received numerous awards, including grants from The Jerome Foundation,
The American Film Institute, and The New York State Council on the Arts.
Fisher's film works are in the collections of the Donnell Film Library,
the Museum of Modern Art, and the Parabola Arts Foundation. Her films "Ghost
Dance" and "Soft Shoe" were included in The Whitney Museum
Series "The Color of Ritual", fall 2000. Fisher premiered her
feature documentary about present-day Burma "KALAMA SUTTA: Seeing
is Believing" in The Forum of the Berlin International Fim Festival,
Feb. 2001. Most recently, her feature-length fiction/essay "everywhere
at once", made in collaboration with Photographer Peter Lindberg
and narrated by Jeanne Moreau, was screened at the Cannes Film Festival,
May 2007.
Reconsidering Relationality
April 18-19, 2007
Download agenda here
The relationship between art works, institutions and their audiences
has recently been a topic of considerable discussion. “Reconsidering
Relationality” will revisit this debate, positing relationality
as a space for art that temporarily suspends institutional autonomy and
explores new forms of interaction with the lifeworld. From this perspective,
the sphere of art functions as a vehicle for such experimentation; as
a laboratory where the relations between different subjects, forms, and
spaces can be tested. This is not a falsely open idea of the sphere of
art, one that “aestheticizes” relations, as well as the social
and creative processes implicit to them, and thus interrupts their effectiveness
by fetishizing and freezing them in turn. Rather, the notion of relationality
that we seek to reconsider is derived from a broad experimental tradition
in modern and contemporary art that has explored meaningful methods of
restoring artistic processes with forms of subjective appropriation.
This is a tradition that has sought to go beyond institutional overdetermination
in an attempt to revive art’s transformative potential within the
broadest possible frame.
- Workshop organizers: Alexander Alberro, University of
Florida & Nora
Alter, University of Florida
- Keynote
Speaker : Jacques Rancière (Professor Emeritus, Université de
Paris VIII)
“Image, Action, Relations: Questions about the Politics of Art”
Participants include: Christa Blümlinger (Université de
la Sorbonne Nouvelle); Wouter Davidts (Ghent University); Diedrich Diederichsen
(Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna & Merz-Akademie, Stuttgart); Lutz Koepnick
(Washington University-St. Louis); Birgit Pelzer (Ecole de Recherches
Graphique, St. Luc, Brussels); Sébastien Pluot (Ecole Nationale
Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Bourges) ; Chantal Pontbriand
(Parachute magazine); Juliane Rebentisch (Universität Potsdam);
Constanze Ruhm (Academy of Fine Arts Vienna) ; Carsten Strathausen
(University of Missouri-Columbia); Felicitas Thun (Academy of Fine Arts,
Vienna); Stephen Wright (Institut National d'Histoire de l'Art, Paris).
New Voices in Art History
Mini lecture series at the University of Florida Paris Research Center
March 26, 2007 - 12:30 PM
Dean
Inkster
Dean Inkster has published numerous essays on contemporary art by artists
such as Hans Haacke, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Philippe Parenno, Liam Gillick,
Alejandra Riera, and others. He has published a book on the photographs
of Valerie Jouve (Paris: Hazan 2002), and edited an anthology titled Tadio
Temporaire (Grenoble: Magasin, 2000). He currently teaches
art history and thoery at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts de Valence in France.
March 30, 2007 - 3:00 PM
Armelle
Pradalier
Armelle Pradalier has an art history degree from the University Panthéon-Sorbonne
in Paris. From 1999-2006 she worked at the Dia Art Foundation in
New York, where she played an important part in the development of the
exhibition spaces of Dia's new museum in Beacon dedicated to the foundation’s
collection. She also worked on numerous temporary exhibitions at the
Dia site in Chelsea (including shows by Rosemarie Trockel, Bridget Riley,
Pierre Huyghe, and many others). She is now affiliated with the
University Rennes 2 and the Institut National d’Histoire de l’Art.
April 2, 2007 - 12:30 PM
Sébastien
Pluot
Sébastien Pluot has directed a number of documentary films since
1995, and is coeditor of the well-known DVD collection "Works&Process," which
focuses on contemporary artists. He has published broadly, writing
on the work of artists as diverse as Bruce Nauman, Louise Bourgeois,
Robert Filliou, Maurizio Cattelan, James Turrell, Fabrice Hybert, and
others. He
currently teaches art history and theory at the Ecole Nationale Superieur
des Beaux-Art in Bourges.
Guest Lectures – Spring Break Programs
Week of March 11-17, 2007
Tuesday, March 13
2:30-5:30
Guest lecturer: Daniel Maximin (award winning poet,
essayist and novelist)
Paris Research Center, Reid Hall, Salle des Conferences
Daniel Maximin, a poet, essayist and novelist, originating from Guadeloupe,
has devoted his time to writing, education, and culture. He has acted
as the director of cultural affairs in Guadeloupe, helped organized the
150th anniversary of the abolition of slavery, and most recently published
the novel Les Fruit du Cyclone: Une geopoetique de la Caribe in
2006. Other publications include : Tu, c’est l’enfance [Seuil
2004, winner of the Prix de l’Académie Française
Maurice Genevoix in December 2004], L’Île et une nuit [Seuil,
2002], Soufrières [Seuil 1995]
7:00-8:30
A Symposium on “Jules Verne’s Paris”
Paris Research Center, Reid Hall, Salle des Conferences
- Download the PDF
- Presenter: Daniel Compère is a professor
at Paris III and at the Université de la Sorbonne nouvelle.
Heis the author of numerous articles and books on
Jules Verne, Alexandre Dumas, fantastic fiction and the popular novel.
In 1972 he founded the Centre de Documentation Junes (Amiens).
- Presenter: Jean-Michel Margot is the President
of the North American Jules Verne Society.An independent scholar, he
has published numerous articles on Verne, and has edited two collections
of documents related to Verne’s reception in the popular press
if the late 19th Century. The foremost bibliographer of Verne’s
studies, his personal collection of Verne criticism is the most extensive
in the world.
Thursday, March 15
10:00-12:00
Guest lecturers Professor Cliff Jones and Professor Lynda Kaid
Paris Research Center, Reid Hall, Salle des Conferences
- A Presentation on international law and the war on terror
by Professor Cliff Jones
Professor Cliff Jones is a visiting faculty member from
the Levin College of Law, at the University of Florida. His research
is centered around US, EC, and international and comparative competition
law, EC law, media law, intellectual property law, constitutional law,
and election and campaign finance law and has most recently published Private
Enforcement of Antitrust Law in the EC, UK, and USA in 1999.
- A Presentation terrorism and international media
by Professor Lynda Kaid
Professor Lynda Kaid is a professor at the University
of Florida and the Senior Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Research.
Her research specialties include political advertising and news coverage
of political events. A Fulbright Scholar, she has also done work on
political television in several Western European countries
2:30-4:30
Guest lecturer Jake Lamar, Novelist
Paris Research Center, Reid Hall, Salle des Conferences
Jake Lamar, an author born and raised in New York, graduated from Harvard
University and spent the beginning of his career writing for Time magazine.
In 1993 moved to Paris and has most recently published the novel Ghosts
of Saint Michel in 2006 [St. Martin’s Minotaur 2006]. Other
publications include Rendez-vous 18ème [St. Martin’s
Minotaur 2003], The Last Integrationist [Crown 1996], and Bourgeois
Blues [Plume 1992].
Friday, March 16
4:00-6:00
Guest lecturer Bob Swaim, Filmmaker
Paris Research Center, Reid Hall, Classe 6
Bob Swaim, an American filmmaker educated in Paris has been active as
a producer, screenwriter, and actor in film, television, and theater.
He has worked all around the world and has won numerous awards at festivals
worldwide, including the Berlin Film Festival and the Festival de Saint
Malo. Upcoming projects include directing a play at the Theatre du Chatelet.
His films include : Nos Amis Les Flics [2004], L’Atlantide [1992], La
Balance [1982], La Nuit de Saint-Germain-des-Près [1977].
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