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Bourse de Master et de Doctorat à l'Université du Kansas

Bourse de Master et de Doctorat à l'Université du Kansas

The Department of French, Francophone, and Italian Studies at the University of Kansas is currently accepting applications to its M.A. and Ph.D. programs for fall semester 2018.   

Our graduate students work closely with faculty who conduct internationally recognized research in a broad range of fields from medieval to contemporary, including French global literatures and cultures. We seek national and international degree candidates who wish to develop their talents through rigorous exploration of the literary and cultural riches of French and Francophone worlds.

Successful applicants to M.A and Ph.D. programs receive Graduate Teaching Assistantships with an annual stipend ($15,500) and benefit from full tuition remission. GTA’s receive strong support and guidance through a pre-term orientation, a course on language teaching acquisition and methods, and ongoing professional and pedagogical development activities. Our innovative Introduction to Graduate Studies, French 720, provides training for both academic and public humanities careers.

In addition to Graduate Teaching Assistantships and Fellowships, other departmental and university research funding opportunities are available: the departmental Cornell and Mahieu Funds support research overseas; the departmental Magerus Fund supports scholarly conference presentations; and the Office of Graduate Studies offer many other research awards, as does Hall Center for the Humanities, http://hallcenter.ku.edu/funding/graduate-support, in addition to its support for external grant applications http://hallcenter.ku.edu/humanities-grant-development-office.

Chimères (https://journals.ku.edu/chimeres), one of the nation’s only graduate-run journals in French and Francophone studies, now in its 50th year, offers students exceptional opportunities for peer research and editorial experience. Graduate students also have the opportunity to spend six weeks as an assistant with our Summer Language Institute in Paris, or spend a year in France through our exchange program with Université de Franche-Comté in Besançon.

The University of Kansas provides excellent research facilities: our libraries rank in the top 50th nationally for volumes held.  Watson Library, the main library, has strong holdings in all fields of French and Francophone studies; Kenneth Spencer Research Library is home to more than 750,000 books and manuscripts; Spencer Museum of Art houses more than 37,000 works. Library collections on our Lawrence campus contain more than 4.2 million volumes. 

Our campus ranks in national polls as among the most beautiful. Set on the Kansas River, the city of Lawrence (population 90,000) provides a vibrant yet calm environment with beautiful parks; a bustling downtown with a large variety of shops, restaurants, bars and coffee shops; and a great selection of recreational activities. Lawrence repeatedly ranks among the top 5 US college towns. 

To learn more about our M.A. program, see: http://frenchitalian.ku.edu/overview-5.

To explore our Ph.D. program, see: http://frenchitalian.ku.edu/overview-phd-french.

To contact faculty members, see: http://frenchitalian.ku.edu/personnel, where you will also find profiles of our current M.A. and Ph.D. candidates.

The director of graduate studies, Prof. Van Kelly (vkelly@ku.edu, +1-785-864-9073) welcomes inquiries about our M.A. and Ph.D. programs.

 

To be considered for funding for fall 2018, please submit your application by January 18, 2018. To apply, click here:  http://graduate.ku.edu/ku-graduate-application

 

ABOUT OUR FACULTY:

Allan H. Pasco is the Hall Distinguished Professor of Nineteenth-Century Literature. His extensive research contextualizes eighteenth-, nineteenth-, and twentieth-century French literature within the periods’ culture, while emphasizing such major figures as Rousseau, Balzac, Flaubert, and Proust. 

Antje Ziethen is a specialist in Francophone global literature, the urban novel, postcolonial studies, diaspora/transnational studies, geo-centered literary theory, and gender studies. 

Tom Booker’s research interests include the French novel of the 19th and 20th centuries, narratology, and first-person narration (novel, autofiction, autobiography). 

Christine Bourgeois’s research focuses on Old French and Occitan literature of the medieval period, including the history of authorship, relationships between medieval themes and modern texts, intersections of the secular and the sacred, and literary representations of saintliness.

Patrizio Ceccagnoli focuses on 19th- and 20th-century Italian Literature and Culture, Italian and European Avant-garde of the 20th century, Giacomo Leopardi and Italian Romanticism, theory and practice of translation, textual criticism and literary theory. 

Diane Fourny works on 18th-century French literature and culture with a focus on 18th-century novel, the history of ideas, Enlightenment and critique of Enlightenment, and autobiography. 

Bruce Hayes, Chair of Department, focuses on Renaissance studies, especially theater, popular culture, and Rabelais, with strong interests in humor and post-Reformation religious polemics. 

Caroline Jewers specializes in literature and cultural history of medieval France and Occitania, with a focus on chivalric romance and lyric poetry. Her other research interests include the early history of the novel and medievalism. 

Van Kelly, Graduate Director, is a specialist in French and Francophone film, literature, and thought of 20th/21st centuries with emphases on poetics, political and social imaginaries, and Sénégal. 

Paul Scott’s area of focus lies in 17th-century studies, particularly theater and poetry; early modern spirituality, liturgy, and hagiography; subversion in Ancien Régime France; and science fiction. 

Kimberly Swanson is a specialist in second language acquisition and language pedagogy, with a focus on French and English phonology/phonetics and on history of the French language.

 

Van Kelly, Graduate Director

Department of French, Francophone, and Italian Studies

University of Kansas

1445 Jayhawk Blvd.

Wescoe Hall, Room 2103

Lawrence, KS 66045-7590

USA

vkelly@ku.edu, (001) 785-864-9073