Professor Bradley Stephens
BA , MA, PhD (Cantab.)
Current positions
Professor of French Literature
Department of French
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
- French literature from the nineteenth century onwards
- French Romanticism, especially the life and works of Victor Hugo (1802-85)
- Literary adaptation and reception theory
- Gender and critical studies of men and masculinities (CSMM)
My publications and public engagement activities primarily focus on cutting through the clichés surrounding Victor Hugo and other iconic male figures from French literature to reveal new insights into their writing and its reception. My most recent project was a biography of Hugo in Reaktion Books' 'Critical Lives' series in 2019, reviewed by The Times Literary Supplement as 'a succint but nuanced appraisal of Hugo's life and works [that] succeeds in its mission to look beyond the clichés and to paint the "arch Romantic" in all his turbulent complexity'. The writer and statesman behind much-loved stories like Les Misérables and Notre-Dame de Paris (better known in English as The Hunchback of Notre-Dame) has a fascinating story of his own that helps us to understand both his massive body of work and his enduring influence. The research for this study underpins my current book project on the poetics and politics of masculinity in Hugo's career, which develops my broader interest in the cultural capital of male French writers. I have also begun scoping out a new project on men and masculinities in contemporary French popular fiction, including bestselling authors like Joël Dicker, David Foenkinos, and Guillaume Musso.
I have spoken about my work at conferences in the UK and USA and at Literary Festivals in London, Guernsey, and Bristol, in addition to writing opinion pieces for both The Guardian and The Huffington Post, and being interviewed by BBC Radio, the L.A.Times, and Dagbladet.
Previous Research Projects
My first project, emerging from my PhD, examined the overlooked connections between Romantic and Existentialist thinking through two of France's most celebrated writers. The main findings were published in my first single-authored book, Victor Hugo, Jean-Paul Sartre and the Liability of Liberty (Legenda, 2011). My subsequent project explored the legacy of Hugo's most famous novel. 'Les Mìsérables' and its Afterlives: Between Page, Stage, and Screen, co-edited with Kathryn M. Grossman (Routledge, 2015), offers new readings of both the epic bestseller and its prolific adaptations; the second, Approaches to Teaching Hugo's Les Mìsérables, co-edited with Michal P. Ginsburg (MLA, 2018), develops new approaches to teaching this literary classic (as part of the Modern Language Association of America's 'Approaches to Teaching World Literature' series).
PhD and MA Supervision
I have supervised PhD and MPhil theses on a range of subjects, including:
- French women Romantic writers and nationhood (which resulted in Stacie Allan's 2018 monograph study Writing the Self, Writing the Nation)
- Fin-de-siècle women's writing and queer translation
- Intersectional women's writing in the early modern period
- The fantastic in late nineteenth-century French and German fiction
- Le merveilleux scientifique in late nineteenth-century French literature
- Jules Verne's utopian narratives
- The figure of the priest in love or prêtre amoureux in French Romantic fiction
I have also supervised MA theses on multimedia adaptation and on translation projects relating to modern French literature, including modernist prose, postmodern writing, and children's fiction.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Book and Print: Timelines
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Modern LanguagesDates
01/01/2013 to 01/04/2013
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Selected publications
01/01/2019Victor Hugo
Victor Hugo
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Cosette? Femininity and the Changing Face of Victor Hugo’s 'Alouette'
Modern Languages Open
The Novel and the (Il)Legibility of History
The Oxford Handbook of European Romanticism
'Les Misérables' and its Afterlives
'Les Misérables' and its Afterlives
Animating Animality Through Dumas, D'Artagnan, and Dogtanian
Dix-Neuf
Recent publications
28/09/2020‘Turning Japanese? Les Misérables from Meiji to Manga’
Adapting the Canon:
Review of Stéphane Desvignes, 'Le Théâtre en liberté: Victor Hugo et la scène sous le Second Empire'
French Studies
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Cosette? Femininity and the Changing Face of Victor Hugo’s 'Alouette'
Modern Languages Open
Review of 'Novelization: From Film to Novel' . By Jan Baetens. Trans. by Mary Feeney. (Theory and Interpretation of Narrative.) Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2018. 202 pp.
French Studies
Victor Hugo gave Notre Dame life as the vibrant heart of France. It can be reborn
The Guardian