Masano Yamashita

  • Associate Professor
  • FRENCH
Address

HUMN 329
 

Office Hours

2024 on research leave

Biography

BA., King鈥檚 College London

Ph.D., New York University

Masano Yamashita was born in Japan and educated in the United States, France, and England. Her research focuses on eighteenth-century French literature and social thought. Yamashita鈥檚 first book, Jean-Jacques Rousseau face au public: probl猫mes d鈥檌dentit茅 (Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment, 2017) studies the communicative, social and literary issues that accompany the development of early modern information societies. Yamashita interrogates the complexities of writing and performing philosophy in an emergent culture of public information and distracting 鈥渘oise.鈥  Her current book project investigates the relationship between chance, accidents and inequality in eighteenth-century France.

Other research projects have appeared in L鈥橢sprit Cr茅ateurEuropean Drama and Performance StudiesForum for Modern Language StudiesOrbis litterarum, as well as in edited volumes bearing on themes such as play, theatricality, the body, and the interrelation between nature and culture.

She was a recipient of a Center for the Humanities and the Arts Faculty Fellowship in 2016 and was recently elected to the MLA French Eighteenth-Century Division Executive Committee (2018-2023). She currently serves as vice president of the Society of Eighteenth-Century French studies and is President of the Rousseau Association. She also works as a member of the editorial board of Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment and the advisory board of Eighteenth-Century Studies.

Masano enjoys teaching the French Revolution and human rights, French fashion and culture, the female Bildungsroman, as well as contemporary cinema and coming-of-age narratives.

Publications

Books:

Jean-Jacques Rousseau face au public: probl猫mes d'identit茅 (Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment, 2017.

Frameworks of Time in Rousseau, eds. Jason Neidleman and Masano Yamashita, Routledge Studies in Cultural History,  2023.

Recent Articles and Book Chapters:

鈥淧laythings of Fortune: Lots and Inequality in l鈥檃bb茅 Pr茅vost,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Modes of Play in Eighteenth-Century France, eds. Reginald McGinnis and Fay莽al Falaky, Bucknell University Press, 2021,  p. 64-81.

鈥淪elfhood in the Early Finance Capitalism of Manon Lescaut,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Forum for Modern Language Studies, vol. 56, issue 4, 2020, p. 468-480.

鈥淒estiny鈥檚 Child: Accidents and Repetition in La vie de Marianne,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Orbis Litterarum, vol. 75, issue 3, June 2020, p. 103-113.

Julie, or the New Eloise,鈥 in The Cambridge Guide to the Eighteenth-Century Novel1660-1820, ed. April London, Cambridge University Press, in production

鈥淟aconism and the Literary Politics of the Social Contract,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Silence, implicite et non-dit chez Rousseau/ Silence, the implicit and the unspoken in Rousseau, ed. Brigitte Weltman-Aron, Ourida Mostefai, Peter Westmoreland, Boston/Leiden: Brill, 2020.

鈥淔ate and Consolation in the Late Rousseau,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Sens Public, September issue, 2019. accessible at 

鈥淩ousseau and the mechanical life,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Rousseau, between Nature and Culture: Philosophy, Literature and Politics, eds. Anne Deneys-Tunney and Yves Zarka. Boston, MA: De Gruyter, 2016, p. 67-81.

鈥淧overty as Spectacle: Marivaux鈥檚 Beggars and Chance in Enlightenment Paris,鈥&苍产蝉辫;L鈥橢sprit Cr茅ateur, 55.3 (Fall 2015): p. 59-71.

鈥淢ute Performances: Silence and Deafness in Diderot鈥檚 Theater Criticism,鈥&苍产蝉辫;European Drama and Performance Studies, n藲2, Paris, Classiques Garnier, 2014, p. 307-325.

鈥淟e philosophe et ses masques: statut du visible et mise en sc猫ne de la sinc茅rit茅 chez Rousseau,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Rousseau et le spectacle, eds. Jacques Berchtold, Christophe Martin, Yannick S茅茂t茅. Paris: Armand Colin, 2014, p. 371-385.

鈥淟ove as habituation in Rousseau,鈥&苍产蝉辫;L鈥橢sprit Cr茅ateur, 52.4 (Winter 2012), p. 55-67.

鈥淭he Revolutionary Return of the Orator: Public Space and the Spoken Word in the Work of Jean-Jacques Rousseau,鈥&苍产蝉辫;Rousseau and Revolutioneds. Holger Ross Lauritsen and Mikkel Thorup. London and New York: Continuum Studies on Political Philosophy, now Bloomsbury Press, 2011, p. 161-174. 

Blog: May 3, 2017