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Colloque international : ‘Strange Habits’ : Vêtement, climat et environnement chez Shakespeare et ses contemporains

Présentation projet

 

Le colloque international que nous organisons s’intitule « ‘Strange Habits’ : Vêtement, climat et environnement chez Shakespeare et ses contemporains ». Il se tiendra les 14-16 mai 2020, à la MSH de Clermont-Ferrand et CNCS de Moulins. 

Parce qu’il couvre la peau et sert d’interface entre le corps et l’environnement, l’habit peut être considéré comme le premier lieu d’une écologie. En effet, au sens étymologique, « éco », dérivé du grec oikos, renvoie à la maison, tandis que la « logie » désigne le logos, c’est-à-dire à la fois le « discours » et la « science.

Ce colloque permettra in fine d’analyser plus finement la façon dont textes et textiles s’éclairent et s’étoffent mutuellement à l’ère prémoderne, et surtout, de repenser le rôle et la place du vêtement dans une Angleterre à la fois soucieuse d’affirmer sa propre culture et désireuse de s’ouvrir sur l’extérieur.

SITE WEB : http://www.strangehabits-conference.fr/



PROGRAMME:


THURSDAY (Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, AMPHI 219)

9.00 Coffee and Registration

9.30 Welcome Speech

10.00 Opening Keynote


CHAIR: Line Cottegnies (Paris Sorbonne Université)

Unlinka RUBLACK (University of Cambridge)
The Triumph of Fashion: A Global History


• HISTORY AND POLITICS I: FASHIONING THE NATION

CHAIR: Ladan Niayesh (Université Paris Diderot – Paris 7)

11.00 Margaret TUDEAU-CLAYTON (University of Neuchâtel)
Without a National Dress but a Climate of their Own: The Invention of the ‘Temperate’ English Climate, Character and Constitution

11.30 May-Shine LIN (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
From Well-Dressed to Naked Ancestors: Antiquarian Writing and Visualizing of Ancient Britons in Shakespeare’s England

12.00 Stéphanie MERCIER (University of Helsinki)
Subverting the Strange Habit of Saint George in Shakespeare


BUFFET


• HISTORY AND POLITICS II

CHAIR: Anne-Valérie Dulac (Paris Sorbonne Université)

14.00 Sélima LEJRI (University of Tunis)
‘Dian’s Shrouds’ and ‘Black Tempests’: Pre-Roman Rite of Passage in Marlowe’s Dido, Queen of Carthage

14.30 Patricia RAVEL (UCA, France)
‘Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off, / And let thine eye look like a friend on Denmark’: Meteorological Climate, Political Atmosphere, and Clothing in Shakespeare’s Hamlet

COFFEE BREAK

• SEMINAR SESSION: REPRESENTING THE OTHER

15.45-17.15

CHAIR: Aurélie Griffin (Paris 3 – Sorbonne Nouvelle)

Ladan NIAYESH (Université Paris Diderot – Paris 7)
‘Investing/divesting Islam on the Early Modern Stage’

Anne GEOFFROY (Université Versailles Saint Quentin)
‘Fabrics, Fashion and the Environment: Representing Venice in Early Modern England’

Anne-Valérie DULAC (Paris Sorbonne)
De Heere’s Theatre of Costumes: Staging New Ecologies

Sophie LEMERCIER-GODDARD (ENS de Lyon)
Changing Habit: The Politics and Theatricality of Clothing in Early Modern Voyages to the Arctic

17.30 Keynote

CHAIR: Anne-Marie Miller-Blaise (Paris 3-Sorbonne Nouvelle)

Sophie Jane PITMAN (Aalto University, Finland)
Apparel for Rain: Keeping Dry, Warm, Clean and Healthy in Early Modern London



FRIDAY (Maison des Sciences de l’Homme)

9.00 Keynote

CHAIR: Sophie Chiari (Université Clermont Auvergne)

Dympna CALLAGHAN (Syracuse University)
‘Garnished and Decked’: Fashioning Shakespearean Accessories

• TECHNIQUES AND ACCESSORIES

CHAIR: Russell Jackson (University of Birmingham)

10.00 Madeleine BARNES (CUNY)
Women’s Work: Embroidery as a Vehicle for Shaping Identity and Environment

10.30 Lisa HOPKINS (Sheffield Hallam University)
Flowers and Needles: Emilia’s Skirt

11.00 Mélodie GARCIA (Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne)
‘How, sir, will you be trimmed?’: English Actors and Spanish Beards

11.30 François LAROQUE (Université Paris 3-Sorbonne Nouvelle)
‘Handy dandy’, which is the hand, which is the glove? Love and Gloves in Shakespeare


LUNCH (Pavillon Lecoq)


• SEMINAR SESSION: UNDRESSING AND CROSS-DRESSING

CHAIR: Sophie Lemercier-Goddard (École Normale Supérieure de Lyon)

14.00-15.30

Danièle BERTON (UCA)
Clad in Rags: Ecopsychology and Transtextuality

Valentina FINGER (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich)
Fashioning Falstaff: Dress and Disguise in Shakespeare’s Henry IV and The Merry Wives of Windsor

Chantal SCHÜTZ (École Polytechnique, Paris)
‘We’re all male to th’middle, mankind from the beaver to th’bum’: Ambivalent Fashions and the Fashioning of Gender in Middleton’s City Comedies

Hannah DE WITT (Edinburgh University)
The Other Mary? The Significance of Mary Fitzallard’s Disguises against the Masculinity of Moll Cutpurse (Edinburgh University)


COFFEE BREAK


• SEMINAR SESSION: CLIMES, CLOTHING AND SATIRE

CHAIR: Anne Rouhette (Université Clermont Auvergne)

16.00-17.00

Charles WHITWORTH (Université Paul Valéry – Montpellier III)
Apes, Gulls and Fashion Victims: Dress and Undress in the London Pamphlets of Thomas Dekker

Anna DEMOUX (UCA, France)
Changing Habits in the Quarto and Folio Version of Ben Jonson’s Every Man in his Humour

Anne Marie MILLER-BLAISE (Université Paris 3-Sorbonne Nouvelle)
John Webster and the Materials of Satire


COFFEE BREAK


• CLOTHES AND CLIMES ONSTAGE

17.30 An Interview of Perry MILLS (King Edward VI School, Stratford-upon-Avon) led by Anne-Marie Miller Blaise (Paris 3 – Sorbonne Nouvelle) and Sophie Chiari (Université Clermont Auvergne)



DINNER





SATURDAY (Centre National du Costume de Scène, MOULINS)


10.00 Keynote

CHAIR: Ariane Fennetaux

Patricia LENNOX (New York University, Gallatin School)
Not Too Far and Not Too Near: Shakespeare, Costume and Performance



• THE MATERIALITY OF CLOTHING AND CLIMATE: ELEMENTS AND TEXTILES

CHAIR: Chantal Schütz

11.00 Julianna VISCO (Columbia University, New York)
Makers of Text and Makers of Craft

11.30 Daniel BENDER (Pace University, New York)
The Victors’ Secret: Silk versus Wool in 2 Henry VI

12.00 Sophie CHIARI (UCA)
‘Her clothes spread wide / And mermaid-like while they bore her up’: Water-infused Clothes and Climes on the Early Modern Stage

12.30 Armelle SABATIER (Université Panthéon Assas, France)
Discoloured Taffeta and Variable Colours: Materialising Iris’ Rainbow Stage Costume in Jacobean Drama

LUNCH

• WORKSHOP

14.30 Ariane FENNETAUX (Université Paris Diderot), Sébastien PASSOT (costumier, The School of Historical Dress)

17.00 END OF THE CONFERENCE