La Faculté des Lettres
PAS building room 2401
Professor of French
Member of the French Studies Department and the MARGOT research group.
Teaching and research interests include medieval French, with a focus on the French of England; medieval French verse hagiography; electronic texts and critical editions; contemporary Quebec and Canadian literature.
Courses in language and cultural studies, at both the undergraduate and graduate level, ranging from first year language courses to graduate courses on medieval French language and literature, electronic texts, and contemporary Quebec literature.
Research publications are in the areas of electronic publishing of Medieval and Early Modern French texts (as a founding member of the MARGOT group), translations and critical editions of Anglo-Norman hagiography, medieval multi-lingual cultural theory and practices in England, as well as earlier work in bibliography, and critical studies of modern Canadian and Quebec literature.
My current research is focused on three projects in medieval studies.
The development and expansion of the electronic corpus of Anglo-Norman hagiography on the MARGOT website. This includes the editions of the following lives found as a unique collection in the Campsey manuscript (to which I am progressively adding editions of other manuscript copies of the six Campsey lives which are extant in other copies):
In addition to the lives from the Campsey manuscript, the electronic corpus includes the 13th-century Anglo-Norman life of S. Clement, pape (Cambridge, Trinity College, MS R.3.46)
In collaboration with Jocelyn Wogan-Browne and Thelma Fenster, I am editing to a critical anthology of some 70 textual prologues or other passages in the French of England which reflect on the nature and strategies of vernacularity. Widely representative texts from the extant corpus will be edited from the manuscript sources and translated, with introductions, notes, and extensive reference to Middle English analogues and parallels. There will be a glossary, a list of Anglo-Norman /Middle English overlaps, an appendix of Middle English translations and reworkings of Prologues. This volume is a complementary volume to the earlier critical anthology, The Idea of the Vernacular: an Anthology of Middle English LIterary Theory, 1280-1520, ed. Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Nicholas Watson, Andrew Taylor, Ruth Evans (Penn State Press, 1999).
Administrative service at the University of Waterloo includes: Chair of French Studies Department, 1990-95; Faculty of Arts Associate Dean, Graduate Studies and Research, 1996-2000; Resident Director, Waterloo-Trent-Toronto programme at the Université de Nantes, 1983-84, 1995-96, Fall 2002, Winter 2008.
La Faculté des Lettres
PAS building room 2401
The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.