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The notion of "exposure" underlies much modern thinking about identity, representation, ethics, desire and sexuality. This provocative notion is explored in a collection of essays selected from, and inspired by, the proceedings of a conference held in the Department of French at the University of Cambridge in 2002. The authors engage with exposure as both object and mode of representation in a range of cultural media: literature, critical theory, visual art and film. They analyse a variety of works from the medieval, early-modern, and modern periods, examining not only canonical texts such as Montaigne's Essais but also lesser-studied works such as the psychoanalytic theory of Didier Anzieu, the photomontage self-portraits of Claude Cahun, and the novel La Nouvelle Pornographie by Marie Nimier. This volume thus both illustrates and, more importantly, interrogates the richness of the term "exposure", in a way that is stimulating for students and researchers alike.
Table des matières
Contents: Marc Lafrance: Exposing the Body: Didier Anzieu and the Psychoanalysis of Skin - Rakhee Balaram: Blood, Sweat and Tears: Exposing the Limits of the Body in écriture féminine - Elza Adamowicz: 'Sous ce masque, un autre masque': Claude Cahun's Photomontages - D. C. Andersson: 'Th' Expense of Spirit in a Waste of Shame': Exposures of the Self in Montaigne - Rima Devereaux: Exposing Narratives: Truth, Crime and the Body in Marques de Rome - Simon Kemp: Unmasking the Detective-Murderer in the Novels of Alain Robbe-Grillet - Simon Gaunt: Exposing the Secrets of the Heart in Medieval Narrative - Mary Anne Franks: Controlled Exposures: Coubert's L'Origine du monde and the Woman-Thing - Libby Saxton: Through the Spy-Hole: Indecent Exposures on Screen - Cathy Wardle: Exposing Female Desire: Narrative, Romance and Pornography in Marie Nimier's La Novelle Pornographie - Alain Viala: What the Theatre Exposes.
A propos de l'auteur
The Editors: Kathryn Banks is completing her Ph.D. thesis at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, and will take up a post as lecturer in sixteenth-century French at King's College, London. Her Ph.D. thesis examines representations of space and the subject in French love lyric and philosophical poetry of the sixteenth century.
Joseph Harris is a Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge. His Ph.D. research was on cross-dressing in seventeenth-century French literature and culture, and he is currently working on desire and sexuality in eighteenth-century France.