Lewis C. Seifert is professor of French Studies at Brown University. A specialist of seventeenth–century French literature, he has also worked extensively on folk– and fairy tales. He is the author of Fairy Tales, Sexuality, and Gender in France, 1690-1715: Nostalgic Utopias (1996) and Manning the Margins: Masculinity and Writing in Seventeenth-Century France (2009). He is currently pursuing projects on friendship in early modern France and on folktale traditions in the French–speaking Americas. Domna C. Stanton, Distinguished Professor at the Graduate Center, CUNY, is the co–editor of the volume on Gabrielle Suchon for The Other Voice: Chicago series, and the author of Women Writ, Women Writing: Gendered Discourse and Differences in Seventeenth–Century France, forthcoming, 2011. Her next book, The Nation as its Others, examines nation building during the reign of Louis XIV. Stanton was the editor of PMLA 1992–1997 and President of the Modern Language Association in 2005.
Lewis C. Seifert is professor of French Studies at Brown University. A specialist of seventeenth–century French literature, he has also worked extensively on folk– and fairy tales. He is the author of Fairy Tales, Sexuality, and Gender in France, 1690-1715: Nostalgic Utopias (1996) and Manning the Margins: Masculinity and Writing in Seventeenth-Century France (2009). He is currently pursuing projects on friendship in early modern France and on folktale traditions in the French–speaking Americas.
Domna C. Stanton, Distinguished Professor at the Graduate Center, CUNY, is the co–editor of the volume on Gabrielle Suchon for The Other Voice: Chicago series, and the author of Women Writ, Women Writing: Gendered Discourse and Differences in Seventeenth–Century France, forthcoming, 2011. Her next book, The Nation as its Others, examines nation building during the reign of Louis XIV. Stanton was the editor of PMLA 1992–1997 and President of the Modern Language Association in 2005.