Maureen DeNino

Maureen DeNino
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Assistant Professor of French

Maureen DeNino specializes in nineteenth-century French literature and culture. Her research explores the relationship between French culture, literature, and the press, with a focus on daily newspapers, illustrated weeklies, and comparative colonialisms across Europe. She has published articles on Tahiti and its place in the French cultural imagination, and on trans-European movement of images of the pétroleuse, the storied women arsonists of the Paris Commune. Her book project, The Paper Colony, will examine how a late nineteenth-century conman mobilized eighteenth-century representations of Pacific island paradise in order to dupe investors and fund a fraudulent colonial venture, the “colonie libre de Port-Breton.” The Paper Colony will approach the Port-Breton colony as a media affair, situating the scam and subsequent press frenzy in the history of nineteenth-century mediatized scandals more broadly.

Before joining the Department of Romance Languages, Maureen taught French language and literature at Smith College. She also taught elementary school English for two years in France (in Nevers and Nancy) as part of the Teaching Assistant Program in France (TAPIF). She welcomes any and all questions from students interested in TAPIF!

Research Areas:
Research Interests:

Nineteenth-century studies; press and literature studies; print culture; history of colonialism; Pacific history and literature

Selected Publications:

Review of David Todd, A Velvet Empire: French Informal Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century (Princeton UP, 2021). Nineteenth-Century French Studies 52, nos. 1–2 (Fall-Winter 2023–2024).

“‘She Smelled of Petroleum’: The Paris Commune in a German Family Magazine.” Nineteenth-Century French Studies 49, nos. 3–4 (Spring-Summer 2021): 605–622. https://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ncf.2021.0028 

“Reading Tahitian francophone literature: The challenge of scent and perfume.” With Andrew Cowell. International Journal of Francophone Studies 16, nos. 1–2 (2013): 113–133. https://doi.org/10.1386/ijfs.16.1-2.113_1

 

Education:

Ph.D., Princeton University

M.A., University of Colorado, Boulder

B.A., New York University