Masters and Students: Jesuit Mission Ethnography in 17th-Century New France

Micah True, Masters and Students: Jesuit Mission Ethnography in 17th-Century New France. Montréal: McGill-Queens UP, 2015.

The Jesuit Relations re-evaluated in light of two concurrent missions - the Christianization of Amerindians and the extraction of information for France.

http://www.mqup.ca/masters-and-students-products-9780773545120.php?page_id=73&

Announcements: 

Les compagnons de Mercure: Journalisme et politique dans l'Europe de Louis XIV

Marion Brétéché, Les compagnons de Mercure: Journalisme et politique dans l'Europe de Louis XIV. Seyssel: Champ Vallon, 2015.

http://www.champ-vallon.com/Pages/Pagesepoques/Breteche.html

(Source: Bulletin de la Société d'étude du XVIIe siècle)

Announcements: 

Panel title: “Pre-modern Disabilities: Ambiguous Bodies, Texts, and Meanings” due date: 1 Sept 2015

Panel title: “Pre-modern Disabilities: Ambiguous Bodies, Texts, and Meanings”

Organiser: Alicia Spencer-Hall, French Dept., Queen Mary, University of London

 

Panel title: “Pre-modern Disabilities: Ambiguous Bodies, Texts, and Meanings”

Organiser: Alicia Spencer-Hall, French Dept., Queen Mary, University of London

Michael Call

Michael Call
Brigham Young University

Congratulations to Michael Call for his new book, The Would-Be Author: Molière and the Comedy of Print, recently published with Purdue UP. Please see the description below :

Book Description

XVIIe siècle, n°266 (2015/1): «Savoirs et pouvoirs à l’âge de l’humanisme tardif»

Sommaire

Bernard Beugnot: Hommage à Marc Boissinot

Savoirs et pouvoirs à l’âge de l’humanisme tardif

Emmanuel Bury et Fabien Montcher: «Savoirs et pouvoirs à l’âge de l’humanisme tardif»

Richard Maber: «Les réseaux de communication érudits et les pouvoirs de l’état en France au XVIIe siècle: indépendance et interpénétration»

Alfredo Alvar-Ezquerra: «Les humanistes de l’Escorial et la révolution historiographique à la cour de Philippe II d’Espagne»

Announcements: 

Francis Assaf

Francis Assaf
The University of Georgia

Congratulations to Francis Assaf for his recent publications.

Book chapters:

"Première journée : voir, dire et savoir". Un Autre dix-septième siècle : mélanges en l’honneur de Jean Serroy. Patis : Champion, 2014. pp. 41-51.

"La Mort de Louis XIV commémorée par les premier Bourbon d'Espagne, Madrid 1716"
Les Funérailles princières en Europe XVIe-XVIIIe siècle 3. Le deuil, la mémoire, la politique
Presses Universitaires de Rennes/Centre de recherches du château de Versailles, 2015.  pp. 259-267.
 

Articles:

Steve Fleck

Steve Fleck
CSU Long Beach

Please join me in congratulating Steve Fleck on his new promotion ... to retired!

Steve Fleck promoted himself to retired status at CSU Long Beach and has moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Notwithstanding these shifts of status and venue, his article "Speaking Folly to Power: Molière's Moebius Saraband" was published in PFSCL and he looks forward to seeing his second book on Molière, to be published with Biblio 17, in print in the very near future. 

Parisian Soundscapes

At the SSCFS meeting this July 2015, Nicholas Hammond presented some of his research related to 17th- and 18th- century street songs and poems preserved in a manuscript entitled Chansonnier Maurepas. His research group has recreated some street song performances and many of the lyrics can be found online at his website. A useful interdisciplinary resource for thinking about popular culture, the history of music/sound, and ephemerality.

www.parisiansoundscapes.org

Jennifer Row

Teaching Resources: 

Vincent Grégoire

Vincent Grégoire
Berry College

Congratulations to Vincent Grégoire, whose article « Emploi d’ ‘objets magiques’ et prédiction de phénomènes célestes dans les Relations des jésuites : une stratégie originale de conversion en Nouvelle-France au dix-septième siècle », will appear in 2016 in the Cahiers du XVIIème: An Interdisciplinary Journal.

Hélène Bilis

Hélène Bilis
Wellesley College

Bravo to Hélène Bilis for several recent accomplishments and new undertakings:

1. Her book -- Passing Judgment: The Politics and Poetics of Sovereignty in French Tragedy from Hardy to Racine  --  is forthcomingwith University of Toronto Press in January 2016.

Children's Book "Louis I, King of the Sheep"

"Louis I, King of the Sheep" by Olivier Tallec (Enchanted Lion Books, September 2015) uses satire to treat themes central to the monarchy of the 17th century in a setting reminiscent of Versailles.

See the review from Publishers' Weekly:

http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-59270-185-8

And additional images at:

http://frenchculture.org/books/new-titles/louis-i-king-sheep

Michèle Longino and Ellen Welch

Ellen Welch & Michèle Longino
UNC at Chapel Hill & Duke University

Please join me in congratulating Michèle Longino and Ellen Welch for the publication of selected essays from the 2014 NASSCFL Conference with Biblio 17.

Networks, Interconnection, Connectivity : Selected Essays from the 44th North American Society for Seventeenth-Century French Literature Conference, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & Duke University, edited by Ellen R. Welch and Michèle Longino. ISBN : 978-3-8233-6970-7

 

Table des matières

Ellen R. Welch & Michèle Longino, Introduction

Luke Arnason

Luke Arnason
York University, Toronto

Luke Arnason wishes to announce a new endeavor to which he welcomes feedback and/or questions from our community. Luke has recently launched a YouTube channel devoted to harpsichord music. The channel, currently in the early stages of development, features two pieces by François Couperin along with a channel trailer. The long-term goal is to make the channel a platform for "vulgarising" the harpsichord that will include the following : harpsichord appreciation tutorials (how does the instrument, and the music written for it, work? What makes great harpsichord pieces great?

Michèle Longino

Michèle Longino
Duke University

Bravo to Michèle Longino for the publication of her most recent book, French Travel Writing in the Ottoman Empire: Marseille-Constantinople (1650-1700), which came out with Routledge Press in March 2015. A description of the book is copied below:                      

French Travel Writing in the Ottoman Empire: Marseille - Constantinople (1650-1700)

Russell Ganim

Russell Ganim
University of Iowa

Congratulations to Russell Ganim for the publication of a recent piece in Dalhousie French Studies :

“Criminality, Performance, and the Search for Paradise: The Appropriation of Othello in Les Enfants du Paradis.” Dalhousie French Studies 102 (Summer 2014). pp. 9-24.

‘Dying of the Fifth Act’: Corneille's (Un)Natural Deaths, Joseph Harris

Joseph Harris
Royal Holloway, University of London

Bravo to Joseph Harris for his article in the most recent volume of French Studies:

"‘Dying of the Fifth Act’: Corneille's (Un)Natural Deaths"

French Studies (2015) 69 (3): 289-304 

http://fs.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/05/19/fs.knv075.abstract

Early Modern French Studies (Volume 37, Issue 1, July 2015)

Varia

Congratulations to the authors featured in the newest volume of Early Modern French Studies (Volume 37, Issue 1, July 2015).

*Please note that effective January 2015, Seventeenth-Century French Studies changed its title to Early Modern French Studies to reflect an expansion in scope.*

http://www.maneyonline.com/toc/emf/37/1

Valérie M. Dionne, “Le Sourire canin de Montaigne et de La Mothe le Vayer, ou la vertu cynique du libertin”