
Doris Kadish
Distinguished Research Professor of French and Women's
Studies
University of Georgia
Keynote Speaker 2007
"Unpacking Eurocentrism in the Foreign Language
Classroom"
Dr. Doris Kadish,
was recently named
Distinguished Research Professor of French and Women's
Studies, University of Georgia. She received her Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve University. She has written on various nineteenth century French, British and American women writers including Simone de Beauvoir, Germaine de Staël, Charlotte Brontë and Harriet Beecher Stowe as well as the Caribbean authors Maryse Condé, Gisèle Pineau, and Simone Schwartz-Bart. Her books that focus directly on women's issues are Politicizing Gender: Narrative Strategies in the Aftermath of the French Revolution (1991), Translating Slavery: Gender and Race in French Women's Writing, 1783-1823 (1994), and an edition of the works of a French abolitionist, Sophie Doin. Her current interests focus on issues of race, class, and gender in France and the French colonial societies of early nineteenth century. The University awarded Dr. Kadish the Creative Research Medal for her ongoing work on slavery and abolition in the French speaking world
(see
www.uga.edu/slavery). |