Degrees:
Ph.D., Univ. of Connecticut
DEA, U. Paris III-Sorbonne Nouvelle
Maitrise d'anglais, Univ. de Paris IV-Sorbonne
B.A., Univ. of Chicago
Elisabeth Herbst Buzay is a specialist of French medieval literature and contemporary French literature, particularly fantasy works. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on multimodal communication across time, genre, and forms of media, with an emphasis on medievalism, the intersection of text and image, visual media, and digital humanities. She also works on topics relating autobiography to authorship and how the personal and critical can be intertwined, especially in women’s writing. Herbst Buzay has published and presented on subjects including medieval and contemporary literature, medievalism, digital storytelling, videogames, and music.
Herbst Buzay’s teaching similarly focuses on communication and interdisciplinarity, with the goal of helping students communicate successfully, find connections to different cultures, topics, and time periods, and develop intercultural competence. She has taught literature, culture, media, film, and writing courses, as well as language and survey courses. In all her classes, she prioritizes teaching students to communicate clearly and effectively and to hone their critical analysis skills by making connections between their own experiences and other cultures.
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20th- and 21st-century French and Francophone literature
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Medieval French literature
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Fantasy, science fiction, and anticipation works
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French and Francophone women’s writing
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French film and theory
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Intersection of text and images
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Videogames
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Digital humanities
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Cultural studies and media studies
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French language
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20th- and 21st-century French and Francophone literature
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Medieval French literature and medievalist contemporary works
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Fantasy, science fiction, and anticipation works (literature, bande dessinées, videogames, film)
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Multimodal communication, particularly the intersection of text and images
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Intersection of autobiography and authorship, the personal and the critical, particularly in women’s writing
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Digital humanities
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Recent publications:
- “Feminist Knights, Questions of Power, and Utopian Societies: Medievalism Today in Cyril Pedrosa and Roxanne Moreil’s L’âge d’or.” The Year’s Work in Medievalism. Issue 35-36 (2020-2021 [published in 2023]): 112-124.
- “A New Normality: The Evolution of the Uchronic Universe of the Series Le château des étoiles by Alex Alice.” Contemporary French & Francophone Studies/SITES: A New Normal. Vol. 26.2 (March 2022): 143-150.
- “The Voiceless Find their Voice: Resistance and Opposition in the Fantasy of Johan Heliot and Pierre Pevel.” Contemporary French & Francophone Studies/SITES, Open Issue: “Sous les Pavés” Dossier (December 2019): 584-591.
- “Fantasy Worlds as Spaces of Significance: Meaning Making in Magical Universes.” Revue de Philologie et de Communication interculturelle. (Im)possible Worlds. Vol. II, No. 1. (Jan. 2018): 79-86.
- With Emmanuel Buzay, “Neomedievalism and the Epic in Assassin’s Creed: The Hero’s Quest.” The Middle Ages in Popular Culture. Amherst, New York: Cambria Press, 2015. 113-132.
Selected presentations:
- “Laurent Voulzy and Francis Cabrel as Modern Troubadours? An Exploration of Two French Singer-Songwriters’ Forays into Medievalist Music.” Session: Music Medievalism in Popular Culture. 59th International Conference on Medieval Studies. Kalamazoo, MI (Hybrid format). 10 May 2024.
- “A Declaration of Independence through Reading and Writing: Laure Murat’s Proust, roman familial (2023).” Panel A4: Francophone Women Voices. 2024 20th & 21st Century French & Francophone Studies International Colloquium. 22 February 2024. (session chair and presenter)
- Roundtable Participant. “Marie de France in Popular Culture II: Marie and Lauren Groff’s Matrix (A Roundtable)” 58th International Conference on Medieval Studies. Kalamazoo, MI (Hybrid format). 13 May 2023.
- “Who am I? What do I do?: (Alt)Academic Digital Storytelling and Autoethnography.” DARIAH ANNUAL EVENT 2022: STORYTELLING. 1 June 2022. Athens, Greece (Hybrid Event).
- “A Plague Tale: Innocence: The Function of Media in a Fantasy Medievalist Video Game.” The International Colloquium in 20th- and 21st-Centuries French and Francophone Studies: Mediums. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA. 24 March 2022.
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- Sponsorship to attend The Teaching Professor Conference, University of Connecticut, 2022
- Provost’s commendation for excellence in teaching, University of Connecticut, Spring 2015, 2016 / Fall 2016, 2020
- Department of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages Graduate Studies Fellowship (French), University of Connecticut, 2016-2017, 2017-2018
- Summer Fellowship for Doctoral Students, University of Connecticut, Summer 2013 / 2014 / 2015 / 2016 / 2017
- Selected panelist travel award to The Canadian Society for Digital Humanities/Société canadienne des humanités numériques Annual Conference, May 2017
- Department of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages Excellence in Research Award (French), University of Connecticut, 2015-2016
- CLAS Graduate Fellow for excellence in academics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Connecticut, 2015
- Department of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages Excellence in Teaching Award (French), University of Connecticut, 2014-2015
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