Odile Cazenave

Professor of French Studies

Education
BA in Lettres Modernes and BA in French as a Second Language, University of Strasbourg, France
MA in English, University of Strasbourg, France
MA and PhD in French, Pennsylvania State University
Office
718 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 502C
Email
cazenave@bu.edu
Phone
617-358-3430

Odile Cazenave is Professor of French Studies in Romance Studies, African Studies, and the Center for the Study of Europe, and is an Associate Faculty of the Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University.

Her research interests focus on the writing and reception of postcolonial literary and filmic narratives in French. Her publications include Femmes rebelles: naissance d’un nouveau roman africain au féminin (L’Harmattan, Paris 1996), Afrique sur Seine. Une nouvelle génération de romanciers africains à Paris (L’Harmattan, 2003)–both are available in translation (Rebellious Women (Lynne Rienner, 1999), and Afrique sur Seine A New Generation of African Writers in Paris; (Lexington Books, 2005)), and Contemporary Francophone African Writers and the Burden of Commitment (University of Virginia Press, 2011, co-written with Patricia Celerier, Vassar College). She has edited and co-edited a number of special issues for different journals: Présence Francophone 58, ‘Francophonies, Ecritures et Immigration;’ with writer and philosopher, Tanella Boni, Cultures Sud, 172 L’engagement au féminin; with Patricia Célérier, Présence Francophone «Vingt ans après le génocide des Tutsi du Rwanda : regards sur la production artistique», (PF 85, December 2015) and Nouvelles Etudes Francophones, (NEF33.1, 2018) on African and Afro-diasporic documentaries. She has written on a large number of Francophone writers and a wide range of topics related to gender and sexuality, postmemory, the local and the global, art from trauma, filiation and transmission, the diaspora, as well as issues of displacement, migration, and citizenship in a global world. Her most recent publications include articles on Indian Ocean Literature, film, and globalization; on writers and filmmakers such as, Assia Djebar,  Khady Sylla, Ananda Devi, Kivu Ruhorahoza, Fabienne and Veronique Kanor, Véronique Tadjo, Boubacar Boris Diop, Alain Mabanckou, Raharimanana, Sami Tchak and Abdourahman Waberi. 

She directed the Section African Literature for the Dictionnaire universel des créatrices (Editions des Femmes, 2013) and has been contributing to the series LittérAfrique (at Hachette International) geared to junior high and high school students in Francophone African countries, especially with an Anthology of the short story in African literature. She is one of the Editors of JALA, the Journal of the African Literature Association. Her places of interest include Francophone Africa, the Maghreb, and the Caribbean.

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