Christophe Barnabé

Christophe Barnabé

Stipendiary Lecturer in French
French
Modern Languages
MA Paris-Sorbonne, PhD Bern

I joined Ƶ in 2022 as Stipendiary Lecturer in French after a teaching position at Somerville Ƶ. I am also a Lecturer at Merton Ƶ. I studied in Paris, where I earned a degree in Psychology and Psychoanalysis from Paris Diderot University, and a master's in French and Comparative Literature from Paris-Sorbonne. I then became an associate researcher at the University of Bern, where I taught, and completed in 2020 a PhD in French and Comparative Literature funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation. 

 

Teaching

At Ƶ, I teach translation into French for Prelims and FHS, French poetry of the 19th and 20th centuries, and literary theory. I also run a French poetry creative writing workshop at the ѲDz&Բ;ç

 

Research Interests

My research focuses on 20th and 21st century literature in French, especially poetry, as well as modern and contemporary writing in Spanish and English from both sides of the Atlantic. I am particularly interested in the study of literary discourse as a means to dismantle traditional dichotomies opposing art and knowledge, magic and science, or rational and irrational modes of thinking.

My first book, Survivance du charme. Le poème et l’idée de guérison: Jaccottet, Hughes, Gamoneda, Celan (MētisPresses, 2024) studies four European poets whose work spans the second half of the 20th century. Their poetry collectively raises a compelling question: why do these authors, each in their own way, call on poetry’s ancient healing roots at a time when medical science has reached unprecedented efficiency? In search of a cure through language, caught between archaic verbal magic and modern rational thought, these poets’ quest reminds us of the dual meaning contained in the Latin word carmen: at once song and incantation, poem and charm.

Besides my work in the field of medical humanities, my other research interests include intermedial approaches to modern and contemporary literature, especially through painting and music. I contributed to the Jean Fautrier: matière et lumière exhibition catalogue (Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 2018). Some of my more recent articles concern textual genesis and questions of poetic form, and are grounded in archival work on the manuscripts of contemporary French poets.

I am currently working on a project on ‘vicarious witnesses’, examining how poets can offer testimony for events they haven’t directly witnessed – questioning, in the context of historical catastrophes, the assumed divide between direct and indirect forms of witnessing.

 

Selected Publications

Survivance du charme. Le poème et l’idée de guérison: Jaccottet, Hughes, Gamoneda, Celan (Geneva: MētisPresses, 2024)

‘Les brisures souterraines de Jacques Dupin’, Genesis, no. 58 (2024), pp. 25-36.

‘Sur le Nil. En longeant les carnets d’Esther Tellermann’, ’ÉtԲè, no. 56 (2022), pp. 106-121.
 
‘Philippe Jaccottet lisant L’Été: comprendre un malaise’, in Albert Camus et la poésie, ed. by Danièle Leclair and Alexis Lager (Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2022), pp. 47-58.

Mutam cinerem’ (on Anne Carson’s Nox), Critique, no. 879-880 (2020), pp. 658-669. 
 
‘Du bruissement des organes à la musique des vers: la cénesthésie à l’œuvre dans “Les Nerfs” de Jules Supervielle’, in La figure du poète-médecin, XXe-XXIe siècles, ed. by Alexandre Wenger et al. (Geneva: Georg, 2018), pp. 79-98.

‘Abrupt Majesty. Francis Ponge Face to Face with Fautrier’s Paintings’, in Jean Fautrier. Matière et lumière (Paris: Paris Musées, 2018), pp. 178-189.

‘Le lieu du perpétuel commencement: Mark Strand, Haydn, et les sept dernières paroles du Christ’, Europe, no. 1026 (2014), pp. 291-304.

(For a full list of publications see my .)
 

Explore further

Discover more about Ƶ