CONVENORS.
Tristan Alonge
Tristan is an associate Professor in 16th-17th French Literature at Université de la Réunion. After a BA in Classics at Scuola Normale di Pisa and a Master in Public Affairs at Sciences Po Paris, he discussed his PhD dissertation in French and Comparative Literature, titled ‘Greek Tragedies and French Classical Tragedy 1537-1677’, in 2015 at Paris IV Sorbonne. He published a first monograph on the relation of Racine to Euripides (Racine et Euripide. La révolution trahie, Droz, 2017) and he is currently working on a book manuscript that will focus on the spread of Greek tragedy in early modern France and the influence of religious affiliation.
Giovanna Di Martino
Giovanna Di Martino is a DPhil student at Oxford and lecturer in Classics at St Hilda’s College. She works on the reception of Aeschylus in Italy from the sixteenth century onwards, under the supervision of Prof. Fiona Macintosh. Originally from Italy, she gained both her BA and MA in Classics at the State University of Milan. She wrote her MA thesis on the reception of the Seven Against Thebes in the United States, for which she spent a semester at the University of Notre Dame under the supervision of Prof. Isabelle Torrance.
Cécile Dudouyt
Cécile Dudouyt is an assistant professor at Paris 13 where she teaches French-English Translation and Translation Studies. Her research explores the reception of Sophocles in English and in French from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment.