Qualifications
BA Modern & Medieval Languages (University of Cambridge), MPhil European Literature & Culture (University of Cambridge), PhD in French (University of Cambridge)
Academic background
I joined Christ Church in 2024. I also teach at Trinity College, and have previously worked as a tutor for Exeter, Jesus, Wadham, and Worcester colleges. Before coming to Oxford, I was a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at Royal Holloway (University of London), taught at the University of Paris-Diderot, and worked as a postdoctoral collaborator at the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences (University of Geneva). I completed by BA, MPhil and PhD studies at the University of Cambridge.
Undergraduate teaching
At Christ Church, I teach the two Prelims literature papers (‘Short Texts’ and ‘French Narrative Fiction’) which introduce first-year undergraduates to literary studies in French. For second- and final-year undergraduates, I teach 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century French and Francophone topics and authors for Papers VIII and XI. I also provide teaching on French-English translation and French grammar.
Research interests
My research interests range across modern and contemporary French literature, culture and thought; theories of emotion, affect and mental health; the medical humanities; and debates surrounding the uses of literature.
I am currently finishing up my first book, Empathy’s Mess: Unsettling Interpersonal Relations with Post-War French Writing, which is under contract with Liverpool University Press. Empathy is often thought of as playing an important social role, by encouraging mutual understanding and cooperation; moreover, it has been suggested that reading and studying literature might help promote empathy. My readings of three important modern French writers (Jean Genet, Roland Barthes and Annie Ernaux), however, demonstrate the diverse ways in which literary texts can challenge or ‘mess with’ their readers’ empathic engagements, and suggest these works instead allow us to explore the diverse (and not always edifying) roles empathy plays in our personal, social and political lives.
I am also working on a second project with the working title Depressive Texts: Exploring Distress and Well-Being with the Modern French Novel, which I began with the support of a Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship. While some argue reading and writing literature might play a 'therapeutic' role in mental health (arguments in which I am (cautiously) interested), my starting point is less how literary works might foster mental well-being, than how they critically engage with debates surrounding the causes and nature of mental distress, and the question of what well-being today could or should look like. Completed publications for this project include pieces on Régine Detambel, Georges Perec, and Jean-Philippe Toussaint, and I am also looking at works by Emmanuel Carrère, Marguerite Duras, Edouard Levé, Marie NDiaye, and Nathalie Sarraute.
Featured publications
Empathy’s Mess: Unsettling Interpersonal Relations with Post-War French Writing (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press; under contract)
‘Perec’s Unsure Text: Exploring Depression Equivocally with Un homme qui dort’, French Studies, 78 (2024), 248–65
‘On Bibliotherapy: Literature as Therapy and the Problem of Autonomy, with Régine Detambel’s Les Livres prennent soin de nous’, Australian Journal of French Studies, 47 (2020), 337–51
‘Empathic Static: Empathy and Conflict, with Simon Baron-Cohen and Virginie Despentes’, in Parasites: Exploitation and Interference in French Thought and Culture, ed. by Matt Phillips and Tomas Weber (Oxford: Peter Lang, 2018), 229–51
For a full list of publications, see my Faculty web page.