FRANÇAIS | ENGLISH |
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-Mathieu Bélisle -Thomas Pavel (Collaborator) -François Ricard (Collaborator)
Isabelle Arseneau est spécialiste de littérature médiévale. Elle a publié Parodie et merveilleux dans le roman dit réaliste au XIIIe siècle (Garnier, 2013), a co-dirigé avec Francis Gingras le collectif Cultures courtoises en mouvement (Presses de l'Université de Montréal, 2011) et dirigé Faute de style: en quête du pastiche médiéval, revue Études françaises, vol. 46, no 3 (hiver 2010). Elle est membre du Groupe de recherche sur les pouvoirs et les sociétés de l'Occident médiéval et moderne (GREPSOMM) et présidente de la Société des études médiévales du Québec (SÉMQ).
Mathieu Bélisle
Michel Biron est spécialiste de l'histoire littéraire du Québec et il s'intéresse plus particulièrement au roman et à la poésie modernes. Il est l'auteur, entre autres, du Roman québécois (Boréal, coll. « Boréal express », 2012), de La Conscience du désert. Essais sur la littérature au Québec et ailleurs, Boréal, coll. « Papiers collés », 2010), de L'absence du maître: Saint-Denys Garneau, Ferron, Ducharme, Montréal, Presses de l'Université de Montréal, coll. « Socius », 2000 et co-auteur, avec Jacques Dubois, Jean-Pierre Bertrand et Jeannine Pâque de: Le roman célibataire. D'À rebours (1884) à Paludes (1895), Paris, José Corti, 1996. Allan Hepburn is James McGill Professor of Twentieth-Century Literature and Chair of the Department of English at McGill University. His publications include the books Intrigue: Espionage and Culture (2005) and Enchanted Objects: Visual Art in Contemporary Fiction (2010). He has also edited three volumes of previously ungathered material by the Irish novelist Elizabeth Bowen: The Bazaar and Other Stories (2008), People, Places, Things: Essays by Elizabeth Bowen (2008), and Listening In: Broadcasts, Speeches, and Interviews by Elizabeth Bowen (2010). He edited Troubled Legacies: Narrative and Inheritance (2007), a collection of essays by ten scholars on the relationship between inheritances---both material and cultural---in British and Irish novels. With Isabelle Daunais, he edited a special issue of University of Toronto Quarterly devoted to novelistic practice. He has published approximately thirty essays on such figures as James Joyce, Edith Wharton, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Elizabeth Bowen, Joseph Conrad, Louis Begley, Thomas Wharton, and other twentieth-century writers. He is currently writing two books, one about Elizabeth Bowen’s fiction and another about “Faith and British Culture, 1939-1962.” Peter Sabor, FRSC, is Professor of English at McGill University, where he holds the Canada Research Chair in Eighteenth-Century Studies and is Director of the Burney Centre. He is the general editor of The Court Journals and Letters of Frances Burney, in progress, and co-general editor of the Cambridge Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Samuel Richardson, also in progress. His other publications include (with Thomas Keymer) Pamela in the Marketplace: Literary Controversy and Print Culture in Eighteenth-Century Britain and Ireland and the Juvenilia volume in the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jane Austen.
Thomas Pavel est Gordon J. Laing Distinguished Professor à l'Université de Chicago. Parmi ses principaux ouvrages on compte: Comment écouter la littérature (Collège de France / Fayard, 2011); La pensée du roman (Gallimard, 2003), L'art de l'éloignement (Folio essais, 1996); Univers de la fiction (Seuil, 1988) et Le mirage linguistique (Minuit, 1988).
François Ricard (Collaborator)
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