Date
March 11, 2026

Location

East Gallery, Maison Française, Buell Hall


Time
6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

Event Organizer

Maison Française


Event Sponsor

Event Co-Sponsor(s)

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Panel Discussion with Thomas Dodman, Carol Gluck, Mark Mazower, Emmanuelle Saada, and Joanna Stalnaker.

Les Volontaires tells the extraordinary story and “family romance” of a young man who was raised to be Rousseau’s Emile, and of his philosophe adoptive mother and step sister–cum–future wife, through the French Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, and the early nineteenth century. Part micro-history, part social biography, this book explores ways and possibilities of writing a fragmentary history in a minor key.

This event will take place in English.   It is presented as part of the New Books in the Arts and Sciences series by the Society of Fellows/Heyman Center for the Humanities and the Maison Française.

About the Author

Thomas Dodman is a historian of modern France and its empire, with a broad training in cultural and intellectual history, and interdisciplinary research and teaching interests in psychoanalysis, anthropology, political economy, and social theory. His work ranges widely, but typically explores social transformation in times of war and revolution, and through the study of emotions and medicine in particular. As director of the History and Literature (HiLi) MA at Columbia’s Global Center in Paris, he also probes the porous boundary between these two disciplines and forms of writing.

About the Speakers

Carol Gluck, is the George Sansom Professor Emerita of History. She specializes in modern Japan, from the late nineteenth century to the present; international relations; World War II, and history-writing and public memory in Asia and the West. She received her B.A. from Wellesley (1962) and her Ph.D. from Columbia (1977). She is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society; former President of the Association for Asian Studies; currently co-chair of the Trustees Emeriti of Asia Society and member of the Board of Directors of Japan Society. She is a founding member and now chair of Columbia’s Committee on Global Thought.

Mark Mazower, Ira D. Wallach Professor of History, specializes in modern Greece, 20th-century Europe, and international history. His current interests include the historical evolution of the Greek islands in the very long run. He comments on international affairs and reviews books for the Financial Times, the Nation, the London Review of Books, the New York Review of Books and others. In 2016 he made a film Techniques of the Body, a meditation on the refugee crisis in Greek history, with director Constantine Giannaris. His most recent books are The Greek Revolution: 1821 and the Making of Modern Europe (2021) which won the Duff Cooper Prize and What You Did Not Tell: A Russian Past and the Journey Home (Other Press, 2017), a family history. He is Stavros Niarchos Foundation Director of the Columbia Institute for Ideas and Imagination, which opened at Reid Hall in Paris in fall 2018 and which brings together scholars with leading artists, writers, composers and film-makers from around the world. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Fellow of the British Academy.

Emmanuelle Saada’s main field of research and teaching is the history of the French empire in the 19th and 20th century, with a specific interest in law. Her first book, Les enfants de la colonie: les métis de l’Empire français entre sujétion et citoyenneté, was published in France in 2007 and translated in 2012 under the title Empire’s Children: Race, Filiation and Citizenship in the French Colonies (University of Chicago Press). Emmanuelle Saada is currently writing a historiographical book reflecting on French and European colonization as a history of the present. She is also working on a project on law and violence in Algeria and France in the 19th century. She has published several articles on colonial law, culture and politics as well as reflections on recent French debates in the social sciences. She is Department of French Chair and Director of the Center for French and Francophone Studies at Columbia University.

Joanna Stalnaker is Professor of French at Columbia. Her work on the French Enlightenment lies at the intersection of literature, philosophy, and the history of ideas. Her research interests include women writers, death and last works, and the theory and practice of description. She is the author of a prize-winning first book, The Unfinished Enlightenment: Description in the Age of the Encyclopedia (Cornell, 2010). Her new book, The Rest Is Silence: Enlightenment Philosophers Facing Death (Yale, 2025), is a moving, intimate portrait of the Enlightenment philosophers—notably a brilliant and unjustly neglected woman—as they were facing death.

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 The Heyman Center for the Humanities, Room B-101
74 Morningside Drive
New York, NY, 10027
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