MGNE UR 1341 — Laboratory

Laboratory: Studies on Nordic, and German and Dutch-Speaking Areas

Headed by Aurélie Choné

    • Affiliated entities
    • Project head
    • Domaine associé
      Domaine recherche 1 - EN
    • Keywords
      Études germaniques Études néerlandaises études nordiques Littérature civilisation histoire des idées histoire culturelle études culturelles et interculturelles intermédialité nature et culture humanités environnementales Humanités numériques

    Introduction

    The research topics of the Studies on Nordic, and German and Dutch-Speaking Areas research unit (Mondes germaniques et nord-européens) reflect the contemporary societal debates linked to recent political, ecological and digital developments affecting the Germanic and North European areas - developments that we aim to understand through a critical study of the past and thanks to new theoretical approaches.

    Research is structured around three transversal and interdisciplinary topics, presented below, which aim to bring together work relating to the Germanic and North European areas, by enabling colleagues specialising in Germanic, Dutch and Scandinavian studies, researchers in literature, the history of ideas, civilisation, cultural history, cultural and intercultural studies, to work together on common themes and varied corpuses: literature (prose, poetry and theatre), political discourse, the press, philosophical texts, iconography (painting, photography, political posters, etc.), performing arts (theatre and dance), music, cinema, video games, digital communication, etc. The diversity of these corpuses is what makes our team so rich and original.

    The members of the research unit work on at least two topics. Doctoral students may choose the topic on which they wish to focus.

    Interactions with other cultural areas, including those outside of Europe, are included in the three topics, with a view to developing a global history drawing on the results of previous work on the topic "Germanic societies and non-European areas" of previous contracts.

    Research topics

    Topic 1 - Discussing the political: media and intermediality in Germanic and northern European spaces (19th-21st centuries)

    Director: Emmanuel Béhague

    This topic focuses on the unifying concept of media, considered in a broad sense, referring to the various theories of media and intermediality, as well as, from a disciplinary point of view, to Anglo-Saxon media studies and the Medienwissenschaften of the German-speaking area. We examine how media function individually as vectors for representing a political, historical, social or cultural reality, but also their interaction, their reciprocal questioning and their hybridisation. By 'intermediality', we mean both phenomena of crossover between different media (text and image in literature, for example, the interplay of text and iconography in press discourse, image and body on stage, etc.) and the transfer from one medium to another (e.g. the film adaptation of a literary work). In an effort to bring research together, the term 'politics' is used here in its broadest sense. Encompassing all the phenomena that characterise urban life while also being the subject of public debate, it refers just as much to issues of remembrance, ideologies, the construction and deconstruction of collective identities, political life and social problems. Four themes have been identified:

    • Images and image creation
    • Identities and territories
    • Vectors of memory
    • Performing the political

    Topic 2 - The challenge of environmental humanities: rethinking the relationships between nature and culture since the 18th century

    Director: Aurélie Choné

    In the context of the environmental and climate debates of recent decades, particularly on the Anthropocene era, this topic focuses on the epistemological, political and social challenges of the environmental humanities - a new paradigm that aims to rethink relations between humans and non-humans beyond the simple nature/culture divide.

    Various fields of research and theoretical approaches are used to analyse the cultural, literary, scientific, technical, religious and political aspects of discourse and practices related to nature: ecocriticism, ecopoetics, ecofeminism, literary and cultural animal studies, zoopoetics, plant humanities, soil studies, literature and ethics, literature and science, visual studies, postcolonial studies, global history, posthumanism.

    Current issues are addressed diachronically, through regional, national and comparative (Franco-German) approaches as well as transnational synergy, and explored in particular from the turn of the 20th century (Lebensreform in particular) and the turn of the 19th century (Romantic period). Four main themes have been selected, which have many points of convergence:

    • Rhetoric, representations and practices regarding nature from the 18th century to the Anthropocene era
    • Animal and plant mistreatment: what forms of resistance are possible?
    • Religious and political discourse between science, art and literature
    • The ambiguity of environmental preservation and the relationship to technology

    Area 3 - Rethinking Germanic and North European studies through digital humanities

    Director: Thomas Mohnike

    The media transformation we are experiencing today should be compared with previous revolutions in knowledge such as the invention of writing 5-6,000 years ago, of printing in the 15th century, the high-speed presses of the 19th century with the invention of daily newspapers and specialist magazines, and the media for transmitting motion pictures (cinema, television, etc.). As with previous media revolutions, current changes are having an impact on scientific knowledge. Digital tools make it possible to access the sources of our knowledge in a completely new way, with methods and theoretical reflections that have yet to be developed. At the same time, it is necessary to think about how to describe the media system that preceded the digital revolution, to historicise this past, which is recent but sufficiently distinct from today's reality to be able to see the profound difference.

    With this in mind, it is imperative to restructure and rethink studies in the humanities more than we have been able to do up to now. This research topic will take a three-pronged approach: on the one hand, researchers will carry out projects that use techniques that can be considered part of the digital humanities; on the other hand, the aim is to reflect on the impact of these methods on our fields of knowledge.

    The work of this topic will take three approaches:

    • Application: carrying out research projects using new digital approaches, including the development of new tools
    • Didactics: training research unit members and others in these new tools and techniques so that they also have an impact on teaching at master's level
    • Reflection: reflection on how media change impacts our disciplines and societies - and how we think about history

    Major events and works

    • Programme ANR-DFG 2022-2025 « Esthétique du protestantisme en Scandinavie du 19e au 21e siècle », co-porteur Thomas Mohnike
    • Programme trilatéral Allemagne-France-Italie de la Villa Vigoni 2023-2025, co-porteur Aurélie Choné : « Faszination und Trauer. Kulturvergleichende Blicke auf Ästhetiken von Biodiversität, Artensterben und künstlerischer Restitution »
    • Programme de Formation Recherche du Centre Interdisciplinaire d'Étude et de recherche sur l'Allemagne (CIERA) « Coprésences dramatiques, théâtrales et sociales : (Dé)constructions de l’altérité culturelle dans les arts de la scène (XIXe-XXIe siècles) » (2021-2023). Projet piloté par Emmanuel Béhague, en collaboration avec Romana Weiershausen (Universität des Saarlandes), Marc Lacheny et Marie Urban (Université de Lorraine)
    • 2 revues internationales : Recherches germaniques, dirigée par Aurélie Choné, professeure en études germaniques, directrice de l’UR 1341 MGNE ; Deshima. Arts, lettres et cultures des pays du Nord, dirigé par Roberto Dagnino, maître de conférences en études néerlandaises à l'Université de Strasbourg, membre de l'UR MGNE, et Cyrille François, maître d'enseignement et de recherche à l'Université de Lausanne
    • Grage, Joachim, Lena Rohrbach, et Thomas Mohnike, éd. Aesthetics of Protestantism in Northern Europe – Exploring the Field. Turnhout: Brepols, 2022
    • Choné, Aurélie, Hamman, Philippe, éd., Le végétal au défi des humanités environnementales / Die Pflanzenwelt im Fokus der Environmental Humanities. Berlin : Peter Lang, Collection « Studien zu Literatur, Kultur und Umwelt / Studies in Literature, Culture, and the Environment », 2021

    News

    Bienvenue à Ellen Rees !

    L'Unité de recherche accueille Ellen Rees pendant tout le mois de novembre 2025.

    Bienvenue à Bernhard Stricker !

    L'Unité de recherche accueille Bernhard Stricker au mois de février 2026.

    Events

    Journée d'études : Le retour de la guerre. Les dramaturgies au miroir des conflits contemporains

    Journée d’études organisée dans le cadre du festival « Echo de Lioubimovka » (26 au 28 novembre, à la Pokop) Si la recherche, de longue date, s’est interrogée sur la mémoire de la violence historique et des guerres dans les arts de la scène, le contexte contemporain invite à repenser cette approche en ce qu’il met la création théâtrale aux prises avec des conflits en cours, en Ukraine ou à Gaza, et marque le retour de la guerre sur la scène, non comme un objet de mémoire, mais comme une brûlante question d’actualité. C’est cette piste que suit la journée d’études « Le retour de la guerre. Les dramaturgies au miroir des conflits contemporains », en clôture du festival « Echo de Lioubimovka ». Qu’est-ce qui change lorsqu’on écrit du théâtre en temps de guerre, et non uniquement sur la guerre ? La prégnance géopolitique et médiatique des conflits contemporains, qui ont pour caractéristique de provoquer un nombre très élevé de morts civiles et de destructions, relance en effet le débat sur la capacité du théâtre de représenter la violence sans la trahir ou la banaliser, de témoigner de l’horreur sans l’esthétiser : elle place l’écriture dramatique, la mise en scène et la performance au cœur d’une problématique éthique rendue plus aiguë par le déroulement en parallèle de ces drames. La guerre contemporaine peut-elle se comprendre au prisme de modèles venus du passé, ou bien ceux-ci sont-ils rendus caduques par les formes hybrides et dévastatrices prises par les conflits auxquels nous assistons ? Entre la dissimulation de leurs véritables motifs, leur robotisation, et les modalités de leur visibilité dans les nouveaux dispositifs médiatiques, qu’ils soient officiels ou contestataires, comment les formes scéniques se saisissent-elles des données nouvelles de la guerre ? Quel peut-être, enfin, l’objectif de ces représentations : peuvent-elles réparer, agir, reconstruire ?

    The French Vaudeville Origins of Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler

    Ellen Rees (Oslo) Conférence invitée sur les liens entre le vaudeville français et la pièce d'H. Ibsen "Hedda Gabler"

    Les PUS à l'oreille : Maltraitance animale et conscience environnementale

    Une revue, une bibliothèque, une conférence, c'est les PUS à l'oreille. Venez écouter et échanger le temps d'une pause méridienne avec les chercheur(e)s qui font les revues de l'Université de Strasbourg !

    Practical information

    • Location

      Building 4
      22 rue René Descartes
      FR-67084 Strasbourg

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