Contemporary French
and Francophone Studies
formerly SITES
A
quarterly publication
Sites
is co-edited
by Roger
Célestin & Eliane
DalMolin at the University of Connecticut,
Storrs.
(For their latest work click here)
Contemporary
French and Francophone Studies
proposes to extend French Studies beyond traditional limits. Inviting
all critical approaches on the latest debates in French Studies (cultural
studies, francophone studies, autobiography, media studies, etc.), the
journal provides a forum not only for academics, but for journalists,
artists, filmmakers, and writers of fiction and poetry as well. Containing
interviews, articles, fiction and poetry, each issue features contributors
from across the disciplines. From 5 to 10% of a given issue is in French;
the remaining contents are either in English or bilingual form.
SUBSCRIBE
NOW to the only journal in the field
edited in the USA!
The
objective of Contemporary French and Francophone Studies is to
reflect the enormous vitality and variety displayed by those engaged
in the field of French Studies. Editorial policy is designed to foster
controversy in the field of 20th-Cent./Contemporary French Studies)
which is already in significant ideological ferment. Contemporary
French and Francophone Studies has attempted to follow this objective
in both past issues on popular culture, autobiography, contemporary
writers and poets, women, visual arts, travel writing translation, eroticism,
French and other disciplines and will continue to do so in upcoming
issues on France/USA, Proust in the 21st Century, and Writing &
Film.
From
John Taylor's review of SITES in the Times Literary Supplement
(Nov. 19, 2000):
-
Sites
has a "contagious enthusiasm with which this attractively
designed journal participates in contemporary debates concerning
France."
-
"Sites
is an important and stimulating review whose next issues will
be impatiently awaited."
-
"Roger
Célestin and Eliane DalMolin, the Editors of Sites,
feistily combat the idée reçue that 'nothing has
happened in French literature for a long time.'"
-
About
the three issues on "Writing in French in the 90s: Novelists
and Poets: "An excellent feature... are the often extensive
essays on - or in depth interviews with - most of the novelists
and poets. In all, numerous literary approaches are represented,
and the selection justifies the Editor's claim that French literature
has remained challenging and compelling from 1950 to 1990, a period
during which - according to the standard, narrow, over-simplifying
explanation - Sartre's littérature engagée yielded
to the New Novel."
FIND
OUT why Contemporary French and Francophone Studies has
become the most exciting journal published in the field today...
CLICK
HERE to view our latest issue and for a sample
copy of a back issue go to: www.tandf.co.uk/journals
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