He discussed graft and transplant as prominent metaphors for the migrant and the host in the works of Malika Mokeddem and Jean-Luc Nancy. He has also explored social practices of exclusion and rebranding of the self in the context of the AIDS pandemic in France as well as in Sub-Saharan Africa through the works of Koulsy Lamko and Fanta Regina Nacro. He published Writing and Filming the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda: Dismembering and Remembering Traumatic History in 2010 and co-organized in 2014 an interdisciplinary conference and a film series in Paris on the representations of the Genocide against the Tutsi of Rwanda: Rwanda 1994-2014 : constructions mémorielles et écriture de l’histoire. His scholarship and teaching investigate the social dynamics and polemical tensions between personal memory and collective trauma through testimonial literature, cinema, and documentaries. Dauge-Roth Professor of French and Francophone Studies AssociationsĪlexandre Dauge-Roth, Ph.D University of MichiganĪlexandre Dauge-Roth is Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies.
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