Programme > Vendredi 18 octobre

  • 9h-10h30 : Session 4 - Neo-Mythical fiction(chair : Jean-Michel Ganteau)

    1.     Elsa Cavalié (Avignon université, France), “The concept of anachronism is the historian’s truth”Uses of Anachronism in Retellings of Greek Myth”

    2.     Ingibjörg Ágústsdóttir (University of Iceland), “Greek Myth Rewritings in the #MeToo Era: A Move Towards a ‘Neo-Mythohistorical’ Subgenre Within Historical Fiction?”

    3.     Justine Gonnaud (Avignon Université, France), “A Neo-Mythical Gaze on Medusa: Filling in the Blind Spots of Cultural Memory”

  • 10h30-11h : Coffee break

  • 11h00-12h :  "Ought it not all to be re-written instantly’?: modernism and the re-invention of historical fiction", Diana Wallace, University of South Wales, UK.

  • 12h-14h : Lunch – Le Pavillon  

  • 14h-16h : Session 5 - Neo-Victorian Biofictional narratives and Neo-historical poetry
    (Chair : Charlotte Wadoux)

1.     Jana Valová (Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic), “Unveiling the Ordinary “Other” in Neo-Victorian Biofiction”

2.     Barbara Braid (University of Szczecin, Poland), “Reclaiming apparitional lesbians in neo-Victorian biofiction: Gentleman Jack versus Learned by Heart”

3.     Isabelle Roblin (Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale, France), “Graeme Macrae Burnet’s His Bloody Project (2015): a Slippery Neo-Historical Novel”

4. Claire Hélie (Université de Lille, France), “The Pendle Witch Trials: Exorcising Witches in Neo-Historical poetry”

  • 16.00 : Concluding remarks
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