The conference

 Nearly thirty years after the publication of Nina Auerbach’s seminal study Our Vampires, Ourselves, we felt the 150th anniversary of J. S. Le Fanu’s Carmilla provided an opportunity to revisit vampire fictions centred on female figures – as yet a largely unchartered territory.

This international conference will take place on October 6 and 7, at the MSHA in Bordeaux Montaigne.

Live streaming

This hybrid conference will be streamed live on the Youtube channel of University Bordeaux Montaigne: https://www.youtube.com/user/Bordeaux3TV/featured

We also plan to record the event and to make the talks fully available at a later date.

Keynote speakers

Gaïd GirardGaïd Girard is professor emertius at UBO (Brest). He research focuses on the fantastic in literature (more specifically Sheridan Le Fanu) and on visual arts. She has published about cinema, from Kubrick to Marker, and in recent years, she has been working more specifically on science-fiction cinema, as well as on writers like William Gibson and Marge Piercy.

 

 
 

 

 

Kim Newman Kim Newman is an English journalist, film critic and fiction writer. Recurring interests visible in his work include film history and horror fiction, and alternative fictional versions of history. He has won the Bram Stoker Award, the International Horror Guild Award, and the BSFA award.

 

Partners and sponsors

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Fromthe CfP

 Nearly thirty years after the publication of Nina Auerbach’s seminal study Our Vampires, Ourselves, we felt the 150th anniversary of J. S. Le Fanu’s Carmilla provided an opportunity to revisit vampire fictions centred on female figures – as yet a largely unchartered territory. Despite a few pages devoted to Carmilla and queer vampires – in The Vampire Book by Gordon J. Melton, 1999, Le miroir obscur. Histoire du cinéma des vampires, by Stéphane du Mesnildot, 2013, or the catalogue of the 2019 exhibition at the Cinémathèque Française –, the centrality of Dracula and male vampires still remains prevalent in critical literature.

Yet, contrary to a received notion, female vampires abound in literature, film, television series, comics, as an unsettling presence that undermines the majestic supremacy of the vampire count, thus perhaps testifying to the latter’s “obsolescence” (to borrow Robin Wood’s formula).

With its multiple film adaptations, Le Fanu’s text still challenges readers in many ways, contemporary readers being sensitive to LGBTQI+ issues and to the aftermath of the #MeToo wave. The historical Countess Báthory also haunts literary and filmic memories, and calls for still other questions, as a power figure that already inspired Bram Stoker himself in Dracula’s Guest, the first chapter of Dracula, later suppressed by the author.

The vampire-woman is omnipresent in art cinema (Les lèvres rouges, Harry Kümel, 1971; Leonor, Juan Luis Bunuel, 1975), blockbusters (the Underworld franchise), European classics (Hammer films, Roger Vadim), Hollywood classics (Near Dark, Kathryn Bigelow, 1987). In a recent study on gender in vampire films, Claude-Georges Guilbert – commenting on the prevalence of women writers in vampire literature – claimed that the female vampire embodies the « future » of the genre. Will participants in this conference prove him right?

The organizing committee will welcome all propositions about female vampires in literature, cinema, comics, with particular attention to those addressing the following issues:


¤ The female vampire figure, between exploitation and empowerment. From Carmilla onwards, female vampires have fulfilled apparently conflicting functions. They are often young, eroticised vampires, and they announce all manner of transgression. In the same movement, they are often at the centre of narratives, they initiate action and are autonomous and admired characters, worshiped by devoted fans – one can think of Vampirella in Warren comics or Lady Dimitrescu in the Resident Evil Village video game. How do authors and publics negotiate this tension? Does this amount to reading the texts against the grain or is this reading actually inscribed in the cultural objects themselves?

¤ Isolated figure or serial type. Dracurella and the several other daughters of Dracula suggest that many female can be seen in terms of variants of a dominant male type – as an instance of the minimal differentiation that defines the culture industries. Do serial types actually predominate over isolated figures? Is there a way to measure this? Can the female vampire exist independently from this logic of derivation?


¤ The female vampire and gender stability. Even more so than her male counterpart, the female vampire is characterised by sexual ambiguity. Oversexualised, often hyperfeminised, she is nevertheless also a creature who seduces, penetrates, rarely without violence. The lesbian romance of Carmilla – but also the ambiguous fascination exerted by the historical figure of Countess Élisabeth Báthory – once more offers a prototype of this subversion of gendered roles. How does this uncertainty manifest itself in the texts or in their reception? Is the female vampire necessarily queer?


¤ Global figure v. local figures. Along the 20th century, the English-speaking cultural industries have largely colonised the visual imaginations of fantasy and horror. How does the female vampire feature in this tension between a globalised culture and local variations with their specific traditions? What are the histories and media specificities? Should we view the female vampire as a figure of the glocal?


¤ The Carmilla hypothesis. Sheridan Le Fanu’s novella haunts every question addressed in this call for papers. We will then welcome propositions examining the specific place of Carmilla in the emergence of the figure of the female vampire, through the circulation of the original text but also through the elaboration of an “adaptation network” (Kate Newell). Could we map out the apparitions of the female vampire in popular culture? How would Carmilla feature in that space?

¤ The figural approach: imagining the female vampire. Female vampires and related figures (harpies, sirens, sphinges, animal-women) : genesis and transformations of such figures in the pictorial tradition since the XIXth century (Munch, Khnopff, Mossa, Philip Burne-Jones), circulation of forms. Variants and typologies in literature from John Keats (Lamia) and Rudyard Kipling (“A Fool There Was”) to Tanith Lee (Sabella or the Blood Stone, 1980), Anne Rice (Pandora, 1998) and Octavia E. Butler (Fledgling, 2005) – through Paul Féval (La Vampire, 1856).

 

 

Scientific committee:

Mélanie Boissonneau (Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle) – Marjolaine Boutet (Université de Picardie Jules Verne) – David Roche (Université Paul Valéry Montpellier 3) –– Yann Calvet (Université de Caen) – Matt Jones (De Montfort University, UK) –– Hélène Frazik (Université de Caen) – Jean-François Baillon (Université Bordeaux Montaigne) – Nicolas Labarre (Université Bordeaux Montaigne) - Dr Matt Melia (Kingston University London, UK)

 

Bibliographie / Bibliography

Auerbach Nina, Our Vampires, Ourselves, Chicago, Chicago UP, 1995

Bell James, ed., Gothic: The Dark Heart of Film, London, BFI, 2013

Boutet Marjolaine, Vampires, au-delà du mythe, Paris, Ellipses, 2011

Creed Barbara, The Monstrous Feminine, New York, Routledge, 1993

du Mesnildot Stéphane, Le miroir obscur. Histoire du cinéma des vampires, Aix-en-Provence, Rouge Profond, 2013

Fenton H. & D. Flint, ed., Ten Years of Terror: British Horror Films of the 1970s, London, FAB Press, 2011

Frayling Christopher, Vampyres: Genesis and Resurrection from Count Dracula to Vampirella, Thames & Hudson, 2016

Gelder Ken, New Vampire Cinema, London, BFI, 2012

Girard Gaïd, traduction et lecture de Carmilla, Arles, Actes Sud, 1996

Groom Nick, The Vampire. A New History, New Haven, Yale UP, 2018

Guarneri Michael, Vampires in Italian Cinema, 1956-1975, Edinurgh, Edinburgh UP, 2020

Hinckonbottom J., E. Falvey et J. Wroot, ed., New Blood: Critical Approaches to Contemporary Horror, Cardiff, U of Wales P, 2020

Marigny Jean, Le vampire dans la littérature du XXe siècle, Paris, Honoré Champion, 2003

Marigny Jean, Les femmes vampires, Paris, José Corti, 2010

Mennel Barbara, Queer Cinema. Schoolgirls, Vampires and Gay Cowboys, London, Wallflower Press, 2012

Newell Kate, Expanding Adaptation Networks. From Illustration to Novelization, London, Palgrave Macmillan, 2017

Newman Kim, ed., The BFI Companion to Horror, London, BFI, 1996

Orléan Matthieu, dir., Vampires, catalogue de l’exposition de la Cinémathèque Française, Paris, Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 2019

Pirie David, The Vampire Cinema, London, Hamlyn, 1977

Round Julia, The Gothic in Comics and Graphic Novels: A Critical Approach, Jefferson, MacFarland, 2014

Round Julia, Gothic for Girls. MistyTM and British Comics, Jackson, UP of Mississippi, 2019

Silver Alain & James Ursini, The Vampire Film. From Nosferatu to Interview with the Vampire, Limelight Editions, 2004

Van Leeuwen Evert Jan & Michael Newton, Haunted Europe, Continental Connections in English-Language Gothic Writing, Film and New Media, London / New York, Routledge, 2020

Paquet-Deyris Anne-Marie, dir., Les cinémas de l’horreur : les maléfiques, CinémAction n° 136, Condé-sur-Noireau, Charles Corlet, 2010

Walker Johnny, Contemporary British Horror Cinema: Industry, Genre and Society, Edinburgh, Edinburgh UP, 2016

 

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