Dr Marine Ganofsky

Dr Marine Ganofsky

Lecturer

Researcher profile

Phone
+44 (0)1334 46 2947
Email
mg216@st-andrews.ac.uk
Office
Room 404
Location
Buchanan
Office hours
Monday 12-1, Thursday 11-12

 

Biography

I joined the University of St Andrews in 2014. After receiving a PhD from the University of Cambridge in 2012, I became a lecturer in early modern French literature at New College (University of Oxford) and later at the University of Kent. I served as an officer for the British Society for Eighteenth Century Studies and the International Society of Eighteenth Century Studies in 2015-2017 and was a Visiting Fellow at Yale University in 2020.

Research areas

I am an eighteenth-century literature scholar with a special interest in libertine fiction and all the pleasure-seekers of the French eighteenth century, from its philosophes to its rakes. Overall, my research contends that the Age of Enlightenment was also an age of happiness whose key insight was to place paradise in the “here and now” rather than in the hereafter (“Le paradis terrestre est où je suis” – Voltaire).

Enchantment and Enlightenment

My research currently explores enchantment and magic in the French Age of Enlightenment. I am writing a book on libertine enchantments (L’Enchantement libertin, ou la magie du désir dans la littérature érotique du XVIIIe siècle) which argues that magical metaphors allow libertine authors to hint at the mysterious and ineffable power of desire. The concept of enchantment in the eighteenth century was indeed applied to phenomena that were beyond human understanding. This research project thus challenges the idea that the Enlightenment disenchanted the world, since it shows that the Lumières instead revealed how truly enchanting Nature was in all its unexplained workings.

Libertine nights

Previously, my research focused on the pleasures enjoyed under cover of darkness during the Age of Enlightenment. My book Night in Eighteenth-Century French Libertine Fiction (Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment, 2018, shortlisted for the 2018 Gapper Book Prize) explains that beyond the indulgences they represent for their readers, the nocturnes of libertine fiction offer an amplified echo of the socio-cultural changes that were transforming the understanding and experience of night for a growing number of men and women in the French eighteenth century. This interest for all things nocturnal led me to author several articles on literal nights and metaphorical shadows in the Age of Enlightenment, delving into subjects like the aesthetics of clairs-obscurs or rococo nocturnes. I have also shared some of my literary discoveries with a wider audience by editing a collection of little known but fascinating (and nocturnal) libertine short stories: Petits soupers libertins (Paris, Dix-huitième siècle 2016).

Casanova

As the most famous libertine of eighteenth-century Europe, Giacomo Casanova occupies a place of choice in my research. I have studied for instance his turbulent nights, his sacralisation of sex or his posing as an “enchanteur”). I have also created a teaching module on the legend surrounding him (FR4128: A Semester with Casanova: myths and afterlives of Histoire de ma vie) and was interviewed to appear in the Sky Arts documentary Casanova Undressed [MOU1] (2016).

Cotutelle Student Supervision

Mr Alexandre Mora

Co-supervision with the Université de Clermont-Ferrand

Co-supervisor - Prof. Françoise Leborgne

Project title: “La violence dans la fiction pornographique du long dix-huitième siècle français” (“Violence in French pornographic fiction of the long eighteenth century”)

2024 - 2028

Selected publications

 

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