Talk

French writer Jakuta Alikavazovic (L'Olivier), British writer Claire-Louise Bennett (Fitzcarraldo), German writer Esther Kinsky (Fitzcarraldo) and Music & Literature editor (and former Man Booker International judge) Daniel Medin will be discussing non-narrative fiction in European writing today and the importance of translation in a salon style event including readings and conversations.

www.musicandliterature.org/



Related / Latest Publications:
Claire-Louise Bennett, Pond (Fitzcarraldo, October 2015)
Jakuta Alikavazovic, L'Avancée de la nuit (Editions de l'Olivier, August 2017)
Esther Kinksy, River, translated by Iain Galbraith (Fitzcarraldo, January 2018)
6.45pm
£7, conc. £5


Learn more about
Claire-Louise Bennett Daniel Medin Esther Kinsky Jakuta Alikavazovic

Talk and Live Drawing

Pénélope Bagieu’s graphic novel Brazen (Penguin) presents a series of portraits of 30 incredible women such as Josephine Baker, Peggy Guggenheim or Tove Jansson. Penelope will be discussing these rebel ladies with Mary and Bryan Talbot, who revisit the life of anarchist and Communarde Louise Michel in the graphic novel The Red Virgin and the Vision of Utopia (Jonathan Cape).
They will be joined by DJ Iko Chérie for some Little Trouble Girls sets.
Chaired by Paul Gravett.



Related / Latest Publications:
Pénélope Bagieu, Brazen: Rebel Ladies Who Rocked The World, translated by Montana Kane (Ebury, March 2018)
Pénélope Bagieu, California Dreamin' (First Second, March 2017)
Mary & Bryan Talbot, Kate Charlesworth, Sally Heathcote, Suffragette (Jonathan Cape, May 2014)
Mary and Bryan Talbot, The Red Virgin and the Vision of Utopia (Jonathan Cape, May 2016)
6.15pm
£7, conc. £5


Learn more about
Bryan & Mary Talbot Iko Chérie Paul Gravett Pénélope Bagieu

Talk

Journalist and critic Boyd Tonkin, whose 100 Best Novels in Translation is forthcoming in June (Galileo), will kick off this inaugural event for the translation strand of the festival with a conversation with Lucie Campos (head of the Book Office at the Institut français) about French and Francophone titles old and new. Followed by a selection of pitches by emerging translators about the French language books they are most excited about this year, discussed by translator Ros Schwartz and editor Ellie Steel.

Please contact books@institutfrancais.org.uk to attend

With the support of the Embassy of Switzerland in the United Kingdom



5pm
£5


Learn more about
Boyd Tonkin Ellie Steel Ros Schwartz

Talk

In A Walk Through Paris (Verso) essayist and publisher Eric Hazan takes us through the radical history of Paris, city of the May 1968 uprising, but also of Robespierre, the Commune and Jean-Paul Sartre. Drawing on his own life story and experiences during the Sixties, Eric Hazan will be in conversation with Lauren Elkin, author of Flâneuse. Women Walk the City.



Related / Latest Publications:
Eric Hazan, A Walk Through Paris, translated by David Fernbach (Verso, March 2018)
Lauren Elkin, Flâneuse. Women Walk the City (Vintage, July 2017)
7.15pm
£7, conc. £5
Double bill: May Made Me + A Walk Through Paris: £9, conc. £7



Learn more about
Eric Hazan Lauren Elkin

Talk

The mass protests that shook France in May 1968 were exciting, dangerous, creative and influential, changing European politics to this day. Mitchell Abidor, author of May Made Me (Pluto), will be discussing their legacy with Novara senior editor James Butler.



Related / Latest Publication:
Mitchell Abidor, May Made Me (Pluto, May 2018)
6.15pm
£7, conc. £5


Learn more about
James Butler Mitchell Abidor