(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 14:55, 28 January 2009 (edit)
SvDijk (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Revision as of 17:00, 16 February 2009 (edit) (undo)
SvDijk (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 27: Line 27:
Keynote-speakers:<br> Keynote-speakers:<br>
* Vera Nünning (University of Heidelberg);<br> * Vera Nünning (University of Heidelberg);<br>
 +
 +Section I: Appropriations de genres <br>
 +Geneviève Patard<br>
 +* Les ''Mémoires'' de Madame de Murat (1668?-1716): une réplique à la dérive misogyne du genre. <br>
 +
 +Section II: Créations de genres nouveaux <br>
 +
* Joan DeJean (University of Pennsylvania). <br><br> * Joan DeJean (University of Pennsylvania). <br><br>
 +
 +
 +Section III: Fiction vs Non-fiction <br>
 +
 +Section IV: Supposed female preference for the novel <br>
 +
 +Section V: Le Paratexte <br>
 +
 +Section VI: Les femmes lectrices <br>
 +
Conference languages: French and English. <br> Conference languages: French and English. <br>

Revision as of 17:00, 16 February 2009


Bochum, May 2009




Theorizing Narrative Genres and Gender

An international two-day conference will be held on this theme at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum (Germany), on 15 and 16 May 2009.

This conference will discuss:

  • the ways in which certain narrative genres (novels, short stories, fairy tales, autobiographies, personal diaries, travel writing, etc.) have been gendered,
  • the impact that these texts have had on readers, both men and women,
  • the question: what consequences have readers’ reactions and the gendered critical discourse had for the formation and development of narrative literary genres?

Recent research, on the feminocentrism of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French and English novel, on narratology or on the differences between female and male reading, has shown that not only is the literary discourse tied to issues of gender, but the metadiscourse is equally imbued with it; the ‘querelles des femmes’ were frequently intertwined with literary disputes.

In keeping with the NEWW’s objectives, the conference will cover a relatively long time period, extending from 1400 to 1900, and will also present contributions treating European literatures that are considered ‘marginal’.

The following issues will be addressed:

  • the effects that literary genres (e.g., the novel) were supposed to have on a female public;
  • the relationships between morality and literature, between realism and idealism;
  • the impact of the concept of gender on key aesthetic notions;
  • the consequences for literary history;
  • the mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion in literary movements;
  • the ‘gendered’ quality of literary theory and narratology.

Keynote-speakers:

  • Vera Nünning (University of Heidelberg);

Section I: Appropriations de genres
Geneviève Patard

  • Les Mémoires de Madame de Murat (1668?-1716): une réplique à la dérive misogyne du genre.

Section II: Créations de genres nouveaux

  • Joan DeJean (University of Pennsylvania).


Section III: Fiction vs Non-fiction

Section IV: Supposed female preference for the novel

Section V: Le Paratexte

Section VI: Les femmes lectrices


Conference languages: French and English.
Organisers: Suzan van Dijk, Universiteit Utrecht and Lieselotte Steinbrügge, Ruhr-Universität Bochum.



SvD, January 2009




  • Conferences > NEWW international conferences > Bochum 2009

Personal tools