Portraitfoto Jody Danard

Jody Danard

“Perdre le Nord”: Literary Subject Constructions in the Narrative Imagined Space of the North in French Canadian Contemporary Literatures from Québec, Acadie and Autochthonous Territories

The North as a contradictory figure between man and nature, space and history, fact and construction has always exerted a certain fascination on people in Europe and has increasingly been used as a spatial narrative frame in literature from Québec – but also of Acadian or autochthonous provenance. The fictional(ised) North has since come under the scrutiny of researchers as a cultural-geographical space of identitary negotiation, but especially as a literary-aesthetic space of identity construction. My PhD project focuses on the following research questions: In what ways have subject constructions with reference to the North been constructed literarily, aesthetically and narratively in exemplary French Canadian narrative texts since the 2000s? Which long-lived topoi and narratives play a role in the different corpora? What new narratives are emerging?

Research Interests
  • French Canadian Literature
  • Indigenous Literature
  • Space in Narratives
  • Imagined North
Vita
  • Since January 2022
    Research assistant, Department of French Literature, University of Bremen
  • 2019 – 2021
    M. Ed. English & French Philology, Christian-Albrechts University of Kiel
  • 2019 – 2021
    M. Ed. English & French Philology, Christian-Albrechts University of Kiel
  • 2018
    Abroad Study Semester at the Université de Montréal, CAU Scholarship
  • 2016 – 2019
    B. A. English & French Philology, Christian-Albrechts University of Kiel
Publications
  • 2023
    Dystopie, Fragmentation et Filiation dans Aquariums de J.D. Kurtness. Nordic Journal of Francophone Studies/ Revue nordique des études francophones, 6(1), p. 34–44. Accessible at: doi.org/10.16993/rnef.96.
Talks, Workshops and Events
  • 10. – 11.10.2024
    Conference ESF Conference „Territory, Tension & Taboo“ Emerging Scholars Forum of the Association for Canadian Studies in German-Speaking Countries, University of Bremen
  • 13.04.2023
    Talk Processus de négociations culturelles, filiation et identité dans Aquariums de J.D. Kurtness at the Forum Junge Romanistik: Migration und Transnationalisierung in der Romania, University of Passau
  • 05.03.2023
    Emerging Scholars’ Forum Solidarité féminine et écoguerrières nordiques dans la trilogie de Gabrielle Filteau-Chiba at the 44th Annual Conference of the GKS, Hotel am Badersee Grainau
  • 22.09.2022
    Talk Les littératures autochtones du Québec: le renouveau du roman de terroir francophone? at the 13. Kongress des Frankoromanistenverbands, University of Vienna
  • 30.08.2022
    Colloquium Acabride – L’Acadie hybride with Prof. Dr. Karen Struve and Dr. Benjamin Peter, University of Kiel
  • 25.07. – 05.08.2022
    European Summer School for Canadian Studies (ESSCS), Scholarship of the AIEQs (Association Internationale des Études Québécoises)
Teaching
  • Summer Term 2023 U Bremen
    Traduction littéraire français-allemandLesekurs zur Einführung in die französische Literaturwissenschaft
  • Winter Term 2022/23 U Bremen
    La littérature francocanadienne (Québec et Acadie): analyses de texte et préparation d’une exposition à la SUUB/Traduction littéraire
  • Summer Term 2022
    Einführung in die französische Literaturwissenschaft: Literaturgeschichte und Textanalyse
limits

“Resistance is a democratic right, sometimes a duty. With literature we can find models for this right and think about its limits.”

Gisela Febel
hierarchy of norms

“If social contradictions are reflected in law, law cannot form a hierarchy of norms free of contradictions.”

Andreas Fischer-Lescano
every day

“Living in contradictions is what we experience every day. Why do we know so little about it?”

Gisela Febel
space

“According to Niklas Luhmann, space is a ‘special facility to negate contradictions’”.

Julia Lossau
sustained engagement

“The history of Western philosophy can be understood as a sustained engagement with contradiction.”

Norman Sieroka