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£29.99

Reflections

New Directions in Modern Languages and Cultures
Edited By: Sarah Buxton, Laura Campbell, Tracey Dawe

£29.99

Twelve essays explore “reflections” in literary and visual culture—from Italian theatre to Cuban film. For students and scholars, this volume provides a fresh, interdisciplinary look at Modern Language Studies, highlighting the dialogue between language and culture.

Mirroring, doubling, imitation, parody, intertextuality. The contributors to this volume — all postgraduate researchers at the time of writing — engage with some of these…
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Mirroring, doubling, imitation, parody, intertextuality. The contributors to this volume — all postgraduate researchers at the time of writing — engage with some of these familiar words to produce articles that deal with the concept of “reflections” in literary and visual culture. Ranging from Italian Golden Age theatre to contemporary French literature and from Cuban film to German fiction, the twelve essays in this volume provide a fresh look at Modern Language Studies, highlighting in particular, the interdisciplinary nature of this field.

On one level, the volume speaks to those exploring Modern Language Studies for the first time, for example, undergraduate students, who seek a greater understanding of the dialogue between language and culture. However, the individual essays also have the potential to attract experienced scholars either looking for new knowledge on specialist subjects, or ways of approaching research in Modern Languages. Through its central theme, Reflections: New Perspectives in Modern Languages and Cultures makes some suggestions about the way forward for Modern Language Studies.

Sarah Buxton

Sarah Buxton completed a BA (Hons) in Modern and Medieval Languages (French and Spanish) in 2005, graduating from Queens’ College, Cambridge University. She then undertook a Masters by Research at Durham University with Andrew M. Beresford, which she completed in autumn 2006. She is currently on a doctoral programme funded by the AHRC. Her research interests focus on the literature, history and culture of medieval Spain, particularly hagiography.

Laura Campbell

Laura Campbell graduated from Durham University in 2003 with a BA (Hons) in Modern European Languages (Spanish), and again in January 2006 on completing the MA in The Photographic Image. Laura is now undertaking an AHRC-funded doctoral research programme on the photographic representation of architecture in the Mexican illustrated press, 1910 to the 1940s.

Tracey Dawe

Tracey Dawe studied German Literature, Political Science and Sociology at the Humboldt University, Berlin. After graduating in 2002, she moved to Durham to write her M.A. thesis Time and the Other in Late Nineteenth-Century German Travel Writing. Tracey is currently an AHRC-funded PhD student at Durham researching themes of identity and colonialism in German travel writing on Africa 1849-1914.

Élise Hugueny-Léger

Élise Hugueny-Léger is a lecturer in French at St Andrews University. Her main teaching and research interest lie around modern French literature and culture, with an emphasis on autobiography, women’s writing and contemporary literature. Before coming to St Andrews, she completed a PhD on the works of Annie Ernaux at Durham University. She has written several articles and essays on Ernaux, as well as a monograph: Annie Ernaux, une poétique de la transgression (Peter Lang, forthcoming).

Julia Brown, Anne Cameron, Isabelle Flour, Barbara Giraud, Kelly Goodman, Anna Hillman, Elise Hugueny-Léger, Imogen Long, Katherine Wallington, Ross Woods, Joanne Young, Laura Campbell, Tracey Dawe

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-84718-836-2
  • ISBN13: 978-1-84718-836-6
  • Date of Publication: 2008-09-26

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-5275-6321-9
  • ISBN13: 978-1-5275-6321-6
  • Date of Publication: 2008-09-26

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: DSB, GT
  • THEMA: DSB, GT
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