Professor Peter France FBA

French Language and Literature
Fellow type
UK Emeritus Fellow
Year elected
1989
Subjects
Modern languages

Summary

Peter France studied at Bradford Grammar School, at Magdalem College, Oxford, and in France. He was awarded a Ph.D. for his thesis on Racine's rhetoric. From 1963 to 1980 he taught at the University of Sussex, and from 1980 to 2000 at the University of Edinburgh, where he is now Emeritus Professor of French and Honorary Fellow. He held visiting posts at the University of British Columbia, the Australian National University, the University of Cape Town, and the Sorbonne, and is a past president of the International Society for the History of Rhetoric and the British Comparative Literature Association. In recent years he has been mainly active as a historian of translation and a translator. Having studied Russian during National Service he has translated a wide range of Russian poets, including Batyushkov, Baratynsky, Lermontov, Annensky, Blok, Pasternak, Mayakovsky, Mandelstam and in particular Gennady Aygi. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and was for ten years chairman of the Poetry Association of Scotland and the first director of the Bibliography of Scottish Literature in Translation. He is married to the historian and translator Siân Reynolds.

Current post

Honorary Fellow and Emeritus Professor of French, University of Edinburgh

Past appointments

University of Edinburgh Professor of French

1980 - 2000

School for Global studies, University of Sussex Lecturer, Reader in French

1963 - 1980

Publications

Oxford History of literary translation in English, vol 4, edited with Kenneth Haynes 2006

Poets of Modern Russia 1982

Racine's Rhetoric 1965

Mapping lives: the uses of biography -2002

New Oxford companion to literature in French 1995

Oxford guide to literature in English translation 2000

Other Fellows of the British Academy

Professor Angela Leighton FBA

English Language and Literature

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Professor Stephanie Newell FBA

Stephanie Newell FBA's research focuses on the cultural histories of printing and reading in Ghana and Nigeria, including spaces of creativity and resistance in colonial-era newspapers.

Stephanie-Newell-FBA

Professor Rachel Bowlby FBA

Literary realism; history and theory of consumer culture; Freud, especially in relation to Greek tragedy and feminist reappraisals; Virginia Woolf; contemporary French philosophy.

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