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Susan HARROW
Specialist in modern literature (19th and 20th centuries), Susan Harrow has published monographic studies on modern and contemporary poetry (The Fractured Self, Toronto University Press, 2004; Colourworks, Bloomsbury Academic, 2020, R. Gapper Book Prize, 2021); on Zola (Zola, the Body Modern, Legenda/MHRA, 2010; Zola: La Curée, University of Glasgow, 1998); on epistolarity and the everyday (Letterworlds in Nineteenth-Century France, Cambridge University Press, in press). She holds the Ashley Watkins Chair of French Literature (Bristol).
Project at the MaCI
April 2025 – June 2025
This book project proposes a major re-conceptualisation of the inter-disciplinary thought and writing of Guillaume Apollinaire (1880–1918) – Polish-Italian-born French modernist poet, novelist, pornographer, visual artist, art essayist, dramatist, journalist, traveller, prisoner, democrat, medievalist, critical Futurist, proto-Surrealist, and all-round cultural insider-outsider. The project will reveal Apollinaire’s inter-cultural imagining in areas of migration, multi-culturalism, community, solitude, identities, sensory landscapes, race, nationhood, environment, technology, emotion, sexuality, belief (Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, atheist), and multi-form creativity. Investigating for the first time – and connecting – the transhistorical axes and the global latitudes of Apollinaire’s writing: – Africa, Antarctica, Australia, Mexico, Oceania, Persia/Iran, the Eurasian Steppe – the project will make a critical breakthrough in Apollinaire studies and contribute to wider humanities initiatives in de-centring and de-westernising the canons of European literary modernism.
Enabled by the resources of the SonImage laboratory at MACI, particularly for its filmmaking and film-viewing resources. Posthuman studies (which is an integral thematic area of my Apollinaire book project) will be the focus for a collaboration involving literary and cultural scholars and advanced-level students (doctorant(e)s), and other specialists/practitioners in order to explore and develop the visual, acoustic, and kinaesthetic aspects of the posthuman imaginary.
Funded by the French government's Programme d'Investissement Avenir and implemented by ANR France 2030
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