Research Interests: Education and Society; Poverty and Inequality; France; Morocco; Ethnography.
Faculty
Frédéric Viguier

Edward Berenson

Research Interests: Cultural history; colonialism; history and memory.
Stéphane Gerson

Research Interests: Cultural history of modern France; politics of place and memory; the writing of disasters; family history; modes of historical writing.
Liz Fink

Research Interests: Decolonization; Social movements; West Africa; France; gender; labor; democracy
Audrey Celestine

Research Interests: Migration; memory; race and identity in France; the French Caribbean (Martinique, Guadeloupe) and the United States
Affiliated Faculty contribute to the IFS curriculum in many ways. Some serve as mentors or dissertation committee members for joint doctoral students, others teach cross-listed classes between their home department and the IFS.
Robyn D'Avignon

robin.davignon@nyu.edu
Research Interests: West Africa, Nature and Technology, Scientific Research, State Formation
Claudie Bernard

cb1@nyu.edu
Research Interests: 19th-Century Literature and Thought; History in Fiction, Fiction in History; Representation of the Family in Fiction and Non Fiction; Theory of the Novel
Sandrine Kott

sandrine.kott@nyu.edu
Research Interests: European, German and French History, Cold War, International organizations, Labour and Welfare state, Socialism
Sonia Das

sd99@nyu.edu
Research Interests: Linguistic Anthropology; Semiotics; Language, Technology, and Inequality; Language Politics and Nationalism; Heritage Language and Multilingualism; Colonial Linguistics; Migration; Seafaring; Law Enforcement; Tamil Diaspora; Francophonie; North America
Hannah Freed-Thall

freedthall@nyu.edu
Research interests: 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century French literature and critical thought; comparative modernisms; aesthetic theory and the sociology of culture; environmental humanities; queer and feminist theory; theory of the novel
Stefanos Geroulanos
sg127@nyu.edu
Research Interests: Conceptual History (19th- to 21st-Century Western Europe), History of Science & Medicine, Historical Epistemology, French and German History
Aisha Khan

ak105@nyu.edu
Research Interests: Colonial and postcolonial Atlantic world, epistemology, identity, race, religion (particularly Islam, obeah), indenture, diaspora, creolization
Elayne Oliphant

elayne.oliphant@nyu.edu
John Shovlin

john.shovlin@nyu.edu
Research Interests: Political and Cultural History of Ancien Régime Europe, Particularly France; the French Revolution; History of Political Economy; Aristocratic Culture and Politics; International Politics and International Political Thought in Eighteenth-Century Europe; the Franco-British Relationships
Guillemette Faure

Guillemette Faure is a journalist and a columnist for Le Monde, primarily writing articles on the way we live. She has written 10 books, including Dîners en ville, mode d'emploi (Dinner Parties: A How-To) on the unspoken rules of French dinner parties, and several books on educational issues. In addition, she is the author of two documentaries, Gauche Caviar, ton univers impitoyable on the history of Limousine liberals in France, and Le Président et les femmes on political communication based on French presidential couples. She is also the author of 2 children books. She will be teaching a course at the IFS entitled La France contemporaine au prisme de la non-fiction créative during the Fall of 2023.
Céline Bessière

Céline Bessière is a visiting professor at NYU's Institute of French Studies (January - March 2024), Professor of sociology at Paris Dauphine University (PSL University) , and a senior member at the Institut Universitaire de France. She studies the material, economic and legal dimensions of family, in particular through the analysis of inheritance and marital breakdown. Her most recent book, The Gender of Capital (Harvard University Press, 2023) co-authored with Sibylle Gollac, demonstrates the existence of a gender wealth gap in formally egalitarian societies and analyzes the social mechanisms that cause it within the family, as revealed in moments of marital breakdown and inheritance. Bessière is also the co-author of a book drawing on a vast research on family courts in France (Collectif Onze, Au tribunal des couples, Paris: Odile Jacob, 2013 ; adapted into a graphic novel, by Baptiste Virot Casterman, 2020) and the author of a book on Cognac winegrowing family businesses (De génération en génération, Paris : Raisons d’Agir 2010).
Luc Robène

Luc Robène is a historian, professor at the University of Bordeaux (France), researcher at
THALIM (CNRS / ENS / Paris 3) and musician (guitar / touring with: The Hyènes -
Strychnine - Arno Futur). His research focuses on the history of culture and cultural practices
in Europe (18th-21st centuries). He co-directs with Solveig Serre the research project PIND –
Punk is not dead, a history of the punk scene in France (1976-2016).
Solveig Serre

Solveig Serre is a historian and musicologist, a former student of the Ecole Nationale des
Chartes (National School of Charters) and a musician (piano), researcher at the CNRS
(Scientific Research National Center). Her research focuses on the history of cultural
institutions in France (18th-21st centuries). She co-directs with Luc Robène the research
project PIND – Punk is not dead, a history of the punk scene in France (1976-2016).
Herrick Chapman

Research Interests: French history; social history; economic history; history of public policy.
Myriam Paris

Myriam Paris est sociologue, chargée de recherche au CNRS. Elle est affiliée au Centre universitaire de recherche sur l’action publique et le politique à l’Université de Picardie Jules Verne à Amiens. Sa thèse (« Nous qui versons la vie goutte à goutte » : féminismes, économie reproductive et pouvoir colonial à la Réunion, Paris, Dalloz, 2020) portait sur le féminisme anticolonial à La Réunion. Au croisement de la sociologie de l’action publique, des études postcoloniales, des études de genre et des théories critiques de la race, ses travaux portent plus généralement sur l’État outre-mer et sur les mobilisations féministes subalternes. Elle est actuellement l’une des responsables scientifiques du projet de recherche collectif EUGENE financé par l’Agence nationale de la recherche : il s’intitule « Gouverner l’humain, contrôler la reproduction : trajectoires (post)coloniales de l’eugénisme », et il aborde l’histoire de l’eugénisme au prisme des politiques reproductives menées dans les périphéries postcoloniales françaises et soviétiques.
Myriam Paris is a sociologist, and researcher at the CNRS (Centre universitaire de recherche sur l’action publique et le politique, Université de Picardie Jules Verne, Amiens). Her first book, Nous qui versons la vie goutte à goutte » : féminismes, économie reproductive et pouvoir colonial à la Réunion (Paris, Dalloz, 2020) focuses on anticolonial feminism in La Réunion. Her research is at the intersection of the sociology of public policies, postcolonial studies, gender studies, and critical race theory. She focuses on the French state in the overseas and subaltern feminist mobilizations. She is one of the lead investigators for the research project EUGENE, sponsored by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche, which focuses on eugenics and reproductive policies in the French and post-Soviet postcolonial peripheries.
Antoine de Baecque

Antoine de Baecque est professeur à l’Ecole normale supérieure, rue d’Ulm. Il et Emmanuelle Loyer enseigneront Littérature, cinéma, histoire : les défis réciproques à l'IFS.
Karim Hammou

Karim Hammou is CNRS Researcher at CRESSPA in Paris. He will be teaching a course at the IFS entitled Généalogie des musiques Hip-Hop en France during Fall 2022.
Sylvain Venayre

Sylvain Venayre is a Professor of Contemporary History at the Université de Grenoble-Alpes, and BD scriptwriter. He will be teaching a course at the IFS entitled La bande dessinée francophone: histoire, technique, esthetique during Fall 2022.
Jérôme Deauvieau

Jérôme Deauvieau est professeur de sociologie à l’ENS Paris et chercheur au Centre Maurice Halbwachs. Il est membre du Groupe de recherche sur la démocratisation scolaire (GRDS) et co-dirige la collection l’Enjeu scolaire à La Dispute Editeurs. Ses recherches s’inscrivent en sociologie de l’éducation et en sociologie du travail. Jérôme Deauvieau a enseigné « La question scolaire en France » à l’IFS de septembre à octobre 2021.
Christine Détrez

Christine Détrez est professeure de sociologie à l'ENS de Lyon, et dirige le Centre Max Weber. Ses recherches s'inscrivent en sociologie du genre et sociologie de la culture. Elle a enseigné "Le tournant émotionnel en sciences sociales" à l'IFS d'octobre à décembre 2021.
Malika Rahal

Malika Rahal is a present time historian. She is a specialist of contemporary North Africa, in particular of the history of the largest African country, Algeria. As of January 2022, will be the director of the Institut d’histoire du temps présent (IHTP), a CNRS research center in Paris.
Her two first books dealt the colonial history of the country. The first is a biography of activist Ali Boumendjel (1919-1957) who was kidnapped and assassinated by the French paratrooper during the "battle of Algiers ». The second is a study of one of the two main Algerian nationalist political parties of the 1940s and 1950s, Ferhat Abbas’ Union Démocratique du Manifeste algérien. Her forthcoming book is a popular history of the year 1962 in Algeria, as the country experienced the end of an eight-year long war for Independence, the end of a 132-year long colonization by France, and the birth of a modern state. She blogs (in French, English and Arabic) at http://texturesdutemps.hypotheses.org/. Her current project deals with itineraries of communist activists in Algeria since the country’s Independence.
Education:
Habilitation à diriger des recherches; PhD (history); Agrégation (history); MA (history); BA (history); BA (sociology).
Areas of research:
Colonization; Revolution; Socialism; Arab World; activism; political parties; memory.
Selected publications:
Books:
Rahal Malika, Algérie 1962. Une histoire populaire, Paris-Alger, La Découverte-Barzakh, 2022.
Rahal Malika, L’UDMA et les udmistes. Contribution à l’histoire du nationalisme algérien, Alger, Barzakh, 2017.
Rahal Malika, Ali Boumendjel. Une affaire française, une histoire algérienne, Paris, La Découverte, (2d edition), 2022.
Selected articles:
Rahal Malika, « Fused Together and Torn Apart: Stories and Violence in Contemporary Algeria », History & Memory, 2012, vol. 24, no 1, p. 118‑151.
Rahal Malika, « Le temps arrêté. Un pays sans histoire. Algérie, 2011-2013 », Écrire l’histoire. Histoire, Littérature, Esthétique, 15 novembre 2013, no 12, p. 27‑36.
Rahal Malika, « Impossible Opposition: The Magic of the One-Party Regime », Jadaliyya, octobre 2013.
Rahal Malika, « 1988-1992. Multipartism, Islamism and the Descent into Civil War. » dans Algeria: Nation, Culture and Transnationalism: 1988-2013, Patrick Crowley., Liverpool, Liverpool University Press, 2017, p. 81‑100.
Rahal Malika, « Empires » dans Martin Conway, Pieter Lagrou et Henry Rousso (eds.), Europe’s postwar periods, London, Bloomsbury Press, 2019.
Rahal Malika et Riceputi Fabrice, « La disparition forcée durant la Guerre d’Indépendance algérienne. Autour du projet Milles autres sur les disparus la « Bataille d’Alger » (1957) », Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales (forthcoming).
Sarah Mazouz

Docteure en sociologie (2010), Sarah Mazouz est chargée de recherche au CNRS rattachée au CERAPS (Université de Lille, CNRS, Sciences Po Lille) et membre de l'Institut Convergences Migrations. Elle est l’autrice de La République et ses autres. Politiques de l’altérité dans la France des années 2000 (Lyon, ENS Éditions, 2017), Race (Paris, Anamosa, 2020) et, avec Éléonore Lépinard, de Pour l’intersectionnalité (Paris, Anamosa, 2021). Elle a enseigné "La question raciale en France" à l'IFS de mars à mai 2022.
Choukri Hmed

Choukri Hmed taught "La France et les suds: La Politique Étrangère entre Influence, Conflits et Coopération (XIXe Siècle-Aujourd’hui)" at the IFS from October to December 2020. Choukri Hmed is Associate Professor in Political Science at Université Paris Dauphine and research fellow at the IRISSO (Institut de recherche interdisciplinaire en sciences sociales, CNRS), where he is director of the Master program in Public Policies and Opinion studies and supervisor for the Political Science class in the undergraduate program. Choukri holds a PhD in political sociology from Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (2006) and a MA of Arabic Literature; Civilization from Université Paris 4 Sorbonne (1994). His main works have been in comparative politics (public policies, immigration, revolutions, colonization) and Middle Eastern studies (especially Tunisia).
Craig Lanier Allen

Craig Lanier Allen is a historian of US foreign relations. He focuses primarily on the history of American exile and expatriation. He is a former foreign area specialist with military and diplomatic postings in Paris, the Maghreb, Sarajevo, Panama, and Seoul. He was also the founding director of the Museum of the American in Paris Association, a non-profit organization dedicated to the creation of a museum to commemorate the history of Americans in Paris.
He has taught at the University of Southern California, the Claremont Colleges, the United States Air Force Academy, George Washington University, the Catholic University of America and Case Western Reserve University on topics ranging from U.S. national security policy to the urban history of Paris and the history of espionage in film.
His current book project, The Café Tournon: Exile, Resistance, and Surveillance on the Left Bank explores the history of a small, seemingly unremarkable Parisian café told through the prism of its significance as a lieu de mémoire, and its centrality as a place of interwar exile, wartime resistance under German occupation, and a target of Cold War surveillance by American intelligence agencies.
Alexandra Bacopoulos-Viau

Historienne des sciences et de la médecine, Alexandra Bacopoulos-Viau s’intéresse particulièrement aux interactions entre les savoirs portant sur le psychisme (psychologie, psychiatrie, psychanalyse) et les pratiques culturelles du XIXe siècle à nos jours. Ces thématiques sont au centre de son manuscrit de livre en cours, Scripting the Mind: Technologies of Writing and Selfhood in France, 1857-1930, basé sur sa thèse doctorale complétée à l'Université de Cambridge.A l'automne 2020, elle a enseigné à l'IFS "Fous, asile, psychiatrie : Imaginaires de la folie en France et dans le monde francophone." Elle a aussi codirigé avec Aude Fauvel un numéro spécial de la revue Medical History sur l'histoire de la psychiatrie racontée du point de vue de ceux que l'on a appelés les « fous ». Elle est actuellement Visiting Fellow au Département de psychiatrie de Weill Cornell à New York.
Christelle Avril

Christelle Avril a enseigné "Classe, Genre, Race Et Santé En France" à l'IFS de mars à mai 2021. Articulant pratiques de travail et appartenances de classe, de genre et ethno-raciales, les recherches actuelles de Christelle Avril portent sur l’hôpital et ses transformations et notamment sur la fabrique des rapports de pouvoir au sein du monde médical. Elle dirige l’École universitaire de recherche Sciences sociales du genre et de la sexualité (EHESS-INED) et co-dirige le Master Études sur le Genre de l’EHESS.
Patrick Simon

Patrick Simon taught "France, société multiculturelle en débats : l’apport des sciences de la population". He is Director of Research at the Institut national d’études démographiques (INED), a fellow researcher at the Observatoire Sociologique du Changement at Sciences Po and the chair of the department Integer of the Institute for Migrations. Trained as a socio-demographer, he studies antidiscrimination policies, and the integration of ethno-racial minorities in European countries. He is one of the principal investigators of a large survey, Trajectories and Origins: The Diversity of Population in France, conducted by INED and INSEE.
Ivan Jablonka

Ivan Jablonka is a Professor of Contemporary History at the Université Paris-XIII-Nord whose wide-ranging scholarship on twentieth-century French history encompasses children and orphans, the welfare state, Jean Genet, and the fate of his grandparents, Jewish refugees from Poland in occupied France. Among other books, he has written the path-breaking History of the Grandparents I Never Had (2012) and Laëtitia ou La fin des hommes (2016), which won the Médicis Prize. Ivan Jablonka is also one of the editors of the online multi-disciplinary magazine laviedesidees.fr. His residence at the IFS lasted from January to March 2020.
Audrey Célestine

Audrey Célestine is a political scientist at the Université de Lille and an expert in the historical sociology of the state as seen from its overseas territories. In 2016, she was appointed to a five-year term at the Institut Universitaire de France. She was at the IFS between October and December 2019.
Sophie Kurkdjian

Sophie Kurkdjian is a historian of media (CNRS) whose work centers around fashion and images of fashion in the twentieth century. She has set up Culture(s) de Mode, a network of scholars whose research explores fashion, and currently co-leads a research seminar on the history of fashion (IHTP/CNRS). She was in residence at the IFS in September-October 2019.
Isabelle Boni-Claverie

Isabelle Boni-Claverie is a writer, screenwriter, and director whose latest documentary, Trop noire pour être française (2015), explores race relations in contemporary France by interviewing French citizens as well as scholars. The IFS organized a rich discussion around this film, and we were delighted to welcome her as a spring visiting professor. Isabelle Boni-Claverie has written for many French publications, taught film, and directed a number of short and long features for TV and cinema. She taught a course on diversity in French-language cinema and organized a film festival on diversity in the cinema of France and other countries. Students in her course contributed to the organization of this festival [course taught January-mid-March].
Sarah Gensburger

Sarah Gensburger is a political scientist and historical sociologist at the CNRS whose expertise encompasses private and public forms of memory, the sociology of the state, and the politics of commemoration, especially as it concerns Jews in WWII France. She has published several books on the commemoration of WWII rescue, Nazi labor camps in France, the wartime looting of artworks, the sociology of memory, and more recently the aftermath of the 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris. Sarah Gensburger taught a summer course for NYU in 2015, “World War II in Paris and Its Afterlives.” In 2019, she taught a course on the politics of memory in contemporary France [course taught mid-March-early May].
Christine Bard

Christine Bard is one of the few French scholars to hold a chair in the history of women, gender, and feminism (at the University of Angers). Christine Bard’s wide-ranging scholarship encompasses works on 20th-century feminism, clothing and gender, cross-dressing, anti-feminist discourse, and more. Christine Bard’s activities also include a Guide des sources de l’histoire du féminisme, a collection of books entitled Archives du féminisme, and a key role in the foundation of the Centre des archives du féminisme in Angers. Her course revolved around feminist movements in contemporary France [course taught early September-mid-October].
Kaoutar Harchi
Kaoutar Harchi is a sociologist of culture whose work revolves around (a) Francophonie as an intellectual and social field and (b) the trajectories of Algerian novelists who have obtained recognition in France. (She has also published three novels.) Her recent book Je n’ai qu’une langue et ce n’est pas la mienne (2016), which blends textual and sociological modes of analysis, focuses on Algerian novelists Kateb Yacine, Assia Djebar, Boualem Sansal, and others. Kaoutar Harchi’s course accordingly explored the politics and aesthetics of recent Algerian literature to trace the construction of the category francophonie within the French literary field. Students gained an introduction to key literary works, to modes of thinking about ‘francophone’ literature, and to the sociology of literature as a method. Kaoutar Harchi was a ‘joint’ visiting professor, invited by the IFS as well as the French Department [course taught mid-October-early December].
Yasmine Bouagga

Yasmine Bougga's summer course explored questions of migration and asylum in France today. Yasmine is a sociologist at the CNRS who specializes in such questions, with a focus on justice, penal institutions, and the sociology of law. Following a short historical overview of French asylum policies since the French Revolution, students explored the contemporary situation, with units on migratory routes; state institutions and procedures; associations and alternative media; forms of militancy and solidarity, and finally the migrants’ own modes of action (associations, cultural centers, etc.). The course included several site visits and conversations with local actors.
Marie Cartier

Marie Cartier is a sociologist at the University of Nantes whose research revolves around the sociology of work, the ethnography of social classes, and gender and care work. Her publications encompass the public sector and social mobility (using mailpersons as a case-study), methods in the ethnography of work, what she calls ‘the France of the Low Middle Class,’ and social stratification. As a visiting professor at the IFS, Marie Cartier taught a spring course entitled La France des classes populaires, a blend of theoretical and empirical approaches. Students thought about the popular class as an analytical category, discovered different methods of sociological analysis, and reflected on the ways in which certain social groups are represented in contemporary France.
Sabine Effosse

Sabine Effosse is a historian at the Université Paris Nanterre working at the intersection of economic, social, and cultural history. Her first book explored the financing and development of state-subsidized housing after World War II in France. She then turned to postwar mass consumption more broadly, with a focus especially on the rise of consumer credit, the gender dynamics of France as a consumer society, and the evolution of the “art” of purchasing. After publishing a major book on this subject she is now working on the banking sector and women (as employees and customers) in twentieth-century France. Her course at IFS in Spring 2018 explored consumer cultures in France from the rise of the department store in the late nineteenth century to the blossoming of the country as a full-scale consumer society in the 1960s.
Antoine Lilti

Antoine Lilti is a historian at the EHESS and a specialist of the eighteenth century and a former editor of the prestigious journal Les Annales. His first book, The World of the Salons, examines literary salons and elite sociability in pre-revolutionary France. His second book, The Invention of Celebrity, argues that the mechanisms of celebrity were developed in Europe during the Enlightenment, well before films, yellow journalism, and television, and then flourished during the Romantic period on both sides of the Atlantic. At the IFS in Fall 2017, Antoine Lilti taught a course — Publics, Media, Publicity — that explored the fundamental ambiguity of the modern public, in connection with commercial publicity, media communication, and the political sphere.
Sylvie Tissot

Sylvie Tissot is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Paris-8 and conducts research at the intersection of class analysis and urban studies. Her areas of research include urban policy and spatial segregation (with a comparative focus on France and the U.S.), the sociology of gentrification, and the construction of analytical categories and media discourse. Her current research project is a comparison of gay-friendly attitudes in New York and Paris. Tissot is also a feminist activist. As the co-founder of the website Les mots sont importants (http://lmsi.net), she is engaged in public debates about feminism, race and religion. With her sister Florence Tissot, she has made two documentaries about the French feminist Christine Delphy. Students in her Fall 2017 IFS course, La question urbaine en France, drew from history and especially social sciences to grasp the changing organization of Paris and its suburbs.