PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF VENUE!!!! The Morris area French Discussion group will meet AT THE LITCHFIELD OLIVER WOLCOTT on Thursday, January 19 starting at 6:00 pm at the offices of Harvest Moon Timber Frame, LLC located at 198 East Street* in Morris (see Google Map below.) Led by a French native, previous discussion subjects have featured le Ricard, l’attentat à Nice, Truffaut interviews of Alfred Hitchcock, les parapluies de Cherbourg, the origin of Le Père Noël, Bic pens, Roquefort cheese, Le Beaujolais Nouveau….
Whether you are just learning French or are an advanced speaker, you are welcome to join. You will have an opportunity to learn, practice, and improve your French language skills at these informal meetings. Due to the shorter time, this month’s discussion will be short and informal.
Our group will then move to listen to the special Author’s Talk at 7:00pm (see details below)
Looking for The Stranger:
Albert Camus & the Life of a Literary Classic
with Author Alice Kaplan
Click Here to Register
Albert Camus’s L’Etranger has been a best-seller for so long that we forget it was ever anything else. But literary classics are made, not born: though The Stranger was a book very few readers understood or appreciated when it was published in 1942, it became a household name – a regular on lists of the great books of the 20th century.
Alice Kaplan delved into publishers’ archives to uncover a key episode in L’Etranger’s career: the first translation of the French novel into English, in the United States and in England, four years after its publication in 1946, when the war in Europe had been over for only a year. This is a tale of two cities, involving an author, his publishers, his translator, and his readers and reviewers. Knowledge of French is welcome but absolutely not required!
Alice Kaplan, John M. Musser Professor of French at Yale University, is a specialist of 20th century France. She works at the intersection of literature and history, using a method that allies archivalresearch with textual analysis. A literary translator, Kaplan serves on the newly created advisory board of the National Book Foundation’s study of the state of translation in the United States. She is a former Guggenheim Fellow, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a recipient of the French Légion d’Honneur as well the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in History for The Collaborator and the Henry Adams Prize for The Interpreter.
REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED
A Wine & Cheese Reception Will Follow
The Hickory Stick Bookshop will provide books for sale & signing.
AFNWCT Members attend for free; A suggested donation of $5 is requested from others.