Séminaire Pélias: Les périodiques comme médiateurs culturels
Mercredi 7 février, Bibliothèque Jacques Seebacher, Université Paris Cité, Campus des Grands Moulins, 5 rue Thomas Mann, 75013 Paris, bâtiment A, 2e étage, 16h-19h
Nathalie Simonnot (chercheur du ministère de la Culture, directrice du laboratoire de recherche de l’École nationale supérieure d’architecture de Versailles) : « Les revues muséales : un objet de recherche polymorphe »/ « Museum magazines: a polymorphous object of research »
Les revues muséales forment un domaine de recherche encore lacunaire dû à leur typologie hybride, à la confluence entre revue d’art, revue de technique et revue d’actualité professionnelle. Destinées aux conservateurs des musées, elles rendent compte de l’état des collections, des acquisitions et des aménagements réalisés. À vocation à la fois théorique, pratique et didactique, elles sont un support majeur pour assurer la diffusion de l’actualité muséale. Cette conférence sera centrée sur les revues muséales françaises au lendemain de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, au moment où les contenus et les formats de ces revues ont évolué pour accompagner le renouveau des musées pendant la Reconstruction. En expérimentant plusieurs formules éditoriales dans un laps de temps parfois très court, ces revues sont passées pour certaines d’un simple bulletin de quelques pages à de véritables revues professionnelles. Cette étude permet de contribuer à une histoire des acteurs, des réseaux professionnels, des expériences muséographiques et de leurs modes de diffusion dans la presse spécialisée. En fournissant quantité d’images d’intérieurs aujourd’hui disparus, ces revues retracent une certaine idée du musée et de ses missions. Petits et grands musées s’y côtoient, quel que soit leur statut, dans un élan général faisant des innombrables contributions des conservateurs qui y publient – plusieurs centaines d’articles et de documents graphiques – un corpus hors du commun pour comprendre l’esprit d’une époque.
Museum magazines form a field of research that is still incomplete, due to their hybrid typology, at the confluence of art magazines, technical magazines and professional news magazines. Intended for museum curators, they report on the state of collections, acquisitions and new developments. Theoretical, practical and didactic, they are a major medium for disseminating museum news. This conference will focus on French museum magazines in the aftermath of the Second World War, at a time when the content and formats of these magazines evolved to accompany the renewal of museums during Reconstruction. By experimenting with different editorial formulas in what was sometimes a very short space of time, some of these magazines evolved from a simple bulletin of a few pages to fully-fledged professional journals. This study contributes to a history of the players, professional networks, museographic experiences and their modes of dissemination in the specialized press. By providing a wealth of images of interiors that have now disappeared, these magazines trace a certain idea of the museum and its missions. Small and large museums, whatever their status, rub shoulders in a general momentum that makes the countless contributions of the curators who publish in them - several hundred articles and graphic documents - an outstanding corpus for understanding the spirit of an era.
Paul Edwards (Université Paris Cité, LARCA) : « Revues photographiques et sociétés photographiques autour de 1900 : la photolittérature, le spectacle et la socialisation »/ « Photographic magazines and photographic societies around 1900: photoliterature, spectacle and socialization »
This paper explains how French photoliterature could appear in the 1890s not only as a crafted, bibliophilic object involving multiple participants but also as an activity of cultural distinction within the socialising practices of provincial photographic societies, in close relation to the ritual of lantern-slide story-telling, at a time immediately preceding the birth of cinema (1895) when there was already an interest in the narrative power of serial photography and what might be called the “kinetic” effect of juxtaposed images on the page. This paper also shows how literary illustrations could double as architectural views that provided documentary evidence of a cultural heritage that was perceived as fragile and in need of preservation, since the members of photo clubs were leisured amateurs who participated actively in different cultural and patrimonial associations. Drawing on local photography club journals, national photography magazines, and recently discovered correspondence, this paper aims to show how photoliterature was collectively produced within a context of bourgeois sociability in a quest for cultural distinction and social recognition at a time when photography was popularly associated with commerce, industry and science, not with fine art and culture; it will show how it forms a continuum with photo-club activities, and that the historical interest of these productions today lies not only in their witty reinterpretations of popular literature, but in what they reveal about photography’s social function.
La séance sera accessible également en ligne. Les demandes d’inscription pour la séance en ligne sont à adresser à
The session will also be available online. Requests to register for the online session should be sent to
Organisateurs/organizers :
Hélène Védrine (Sorbonne Université, CELLF 19-21)
Norbert Verdier (Paris-Saclay, EST-GHDSO)
Alexia Kalantzis (UVSQ, CHCSC & Université Paris Cité, CERILAC)
Comité scientifique/scientific committee :
Jean-Charles Geslot (UVSQ, CHCSC)
Axel Hohnsbein (Université de Bordeaux, SPH)
Alexia Kalantzis (UVSQ, CHCSC & Université Paris Cité, CERILAC)
Catherine Radtka (CNAM PARIS, HT2S)
Viera Rebolledo-Dhuin (UPEC, CRHEC)
Evanghelia Stead (UVSQ, CHCSC)
Hélène Védrine (Paris-Sorbonne, CELLF 19-21)
Norbert Verdier (GHDSO/EST)
Contacts :
Label MSH Paris-Saclay & CELLF 19-21
Periodical Formats in the Market: Economies of Space and Time, Competition and Transfer / Periodische Formate auf dem Markt: Ökonomien von Raum und Zeit, Konkurrenz und Transfer
1–17 June 2021
organised by the DFG Research Unit 2288 Journal Literature
Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the 9th conference of the European Society for Periodical Research at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, will be held online. The virtual event aims to bring scholars together, to present and discuss recent work on periodicals, to meet in virtual coffee breaks, to get in touch, and to keep in touch. We welcome proposals from researchers at all stages of their careers from various disciplines.
1-13 June 2021:
Watch and comment pre-recorded presentations at the conference website
11 June 2021:
Postgraduate Workshop
14–17 June 2021:
Online conference with live sesssins: Keynotes, Plenary Panels, Roundtable
ESPRit Annual Business Meeting (for paying members of ESPRit - to register, click here)
We look forward to welcoming you to this virtual ESPRit conference! Watch the conference trailer here:
For more information, please go to the conference website: esprit2021.blogs.ru
For more information, please go to the conference website: esprit2021.blogs.ruhr-uni-bochum.de, or consult the Conference Programme:
ESPRit2021_Conference_Programme.pdf
Contact:
(plus preceding Workshop on Academic Poster Presentations)
11 June 2021
(15 & 22 April 2021)
Deadline for 500-word abstracts: 28 February 2021
In conjunction with the virtual 9th ESPRit Conference “Periodical Formats in the Market”, a virtual postgraduate workshop will be held on 11 June 2021. The workshop is open to postgraduate students working on any topic with regard to periodicals from any historical period, geographical origin, and cultural context. Personalised feedback will be offered by a committee comprising ESPRit members and members of the DFG Research Unit 2288 Journal Literature.
In addition to the virtual workshop an 11 June 2021, there will be an online workshop on 15 & 22 April 2021 where all workshop participants will get a professional training on the concept and design of academic posters (15 April) and their effective presentations (22 April).
This workshop will be held in English by a communication designer and trainer via ZOOM.
To apply, please send a 500-word abstract of the thesis to be presented in a poster presentation and a short CV (150 words) including name, institutional affiliation, and email address to the organisers no later than 28 February 2021 (
We look forward to welcoming you to the virtual workshop!
Conferences and seminars
Seminar: Taking the Magazine out of the Metropolis
Online, 12 January 2024
Séminaire Pélias: Les périodiques comme médiateurs culturels
Paris, 7 February 2024
Periodicals and the Law: seminar 3
Online, 24 April 2024
Periodicals and the Law: seminar 4
Online, 28 May 2024
12th International ESPRit Conference: Periodicals: S.T.E.A.M. Ahead!
Urbino, 11-13 September 2024