Juliette Cherbuliez
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Department of French and Italian |
Statement of Interests
Juliette Cherbuliez's research is on premodern literature and culture. With this field, she has a broad range of interests, including: the ethics of violence, women as political subjects, garden architecture and public space, history of the book, and exile. Current projects include: Cosmopolitan Medea, which examines the relationship among the ethics of violence, the literary imagination, and myths of state formation; an article on public gardens and knowledge in late-seventeenth-century Paris; and a multi-part project on libertinism from Cyrano to Kubrick. In 2004, she received CLA’s Arthur "Red" Motley Exemplary Teaching award. She has conducted seminars at the graduate and undergraduate levels on space and place in premodern literature, violence and theater, libertinism, and the idea of luxury. On campus, she co-organizes TEMS, a collaborative, interdisciplinary research seminar on early modern Europe.
Publications
Books
The Place of Exile: Leisure Literature and the Limits of Absolutism (Bucknell University Press, 2005).
Articles
"De la cour d'Auguste à la Cour de Louis XIV: Réécriture de l'exil ovidien chez Madame de Villedieu," in Mme de Villedieu: nouvelles perspectives critiques, ed. Edwige Keller (Presses Universitaires de Lyon, 2004): 219-38.
"Before and Beyond Versailles: The Counter-Court of the Duchesse de Montpensier, 1652-1660," Nottingham French Studies, 39:2 (2000): 129-39.
"The Outlaw's Itinerary: Circulation and Identity in Eustache le Noble's La Fausse Comtesse d'Isambourg," The French Review, 73:3 (2000): 475-85.
