Jump to content

Jonathan Fruoco

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jonathan Fruoco
FRHistS
Born
Grenoble, France
Alma materGrenoble Alpes University, Paris Nanterre University
Known forSerial imaginary, Chaucer's dialogism, medieval translations
Scientific career
FieldsMedieval literature, historical sociolinguistics, anthropology, translation studies
InstitutionsParis Nanterre University - CREA
Websitewww.jonathanfruoco.com

Jonathan Fruoco, FRHistS (born 1987) is a French historian who specializes in medieval English literature, with a specific focus on the polyphony of Geoffrey Chaucer's poetry, and historical sociolinguistics. In 2022, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

He is notably the first translator and editor of the medieval Robin Hood[1] poems in French and has directed a research project leading to the development of the notion of serial imaginary.[2]

Biography

[edit]

Dr. Fruoco was trained as a sociolinguist at Université Grenoble Alpes and then focused his interest on the cultural and linguistic evolution of medieval England.[3] He greatly contributed to the studies on Chaucerian polyphony, having published three books on the subject (Geoffrey Chaucer: polyphonie et modernité[4] in 2015 and Chaucer's Polyphony: The Modern in Medieval Poetry[5] in 2020, and Polyphony and the Modern in 2021[6]), and dozens of articles.[7]

He posits that Chaucer, who has long been considered as the father of English poetry, should rather be thought of as the father of English prose and one of the main creators of the polyphonic novel, in the Bakhtinian sense of the word.

Besides his work as a medievalist, Dr. Fruoco has edited and translated for the very first time in French a selection of medieval poems and plays about Robin Hood published in the award-winning[8] Les faits et gestes de Robin des Bois (UGA Editions, 2017).[9] These texts, which had long been unknown to French academics and general readers, track the birth and evolution of this legendary character from the Middle Ages to the end of the Renaissance.

As Associate researcher at Université Grenoble Alpes,[10] he organized a series of conferences that put forward the concept of imaginary and tried to understand how it functions when faced with serial works of art.[11] This research led to the coinage of serial imaginary and was illustrated in Imaginaire sériel: Les mécanismes sériels à l'oeuvre dans l'acte créatif, (Jonathan Fruoco and Andréa Rando Martin (Ed.), Grenoble, UGA Edition, 2017).

Recent Publications

[edit]
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. Geoffrey Chaucer. Troïlus et Criseyde: oeuvres complètes (Tome II). Paris: Classiques Garnier, 2023.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. Geoffrey Chaucer. Le Livre de la Duchesse: oeuvres complètes (Tome I). Paris: Classiques Garnier, 2021.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. Polyphony and the Modern. London: Routledge, 2021.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. Chaucer's Polyphony: The Modern in Medieval Poetry. Kalamazoo, Berling: MIP, De Gruyter, 2020.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. "Geoffrey Chaucer et le dédale de Renommée". Questes 42. Paris: Presses Universitaires de la Sorbonne, 2020.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. "Si l’or doit rouiller, que deviendra le fer ? Chaucer et les représentations du Pardonneur dans les Contes de Canterbury". Mélanges de Science Religieuses 76/4. Lille: FLSH de l’Université Catholique de Lille, 2019, p. 5-18.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. "Emergence des vernaculaires et traductions du sacré dans l’Europe médiévale : le cas de conscience de l’Église". ‘Translatio’ and the History of Ideas: Ideas, language, politics. Volume 1 Edited by Anna Kukułka-Wojtasik. Berne: Peter Lang. 2019, p. 169-176.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. "Geoffrey Chaucer, The Merchant’s Tale et la dialectique de l’élévation". IRIS, Ed. Fleur Vigneron, Université Grenoble Alpes, n°39, 2019. On line, 03 Septembre 2019.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. Les faits et gestes de Robin des Bois : poèmes, ballades et saynètes. Grenoble: UGA Éditions, 2017.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan, Laimé, Arnaud, Rando Martin, Andréa (Ed.). Imaginaire sériel: Les mécanismes sériels à l'oeuvre dans l'acte créatif. Grenoble: UGA Éditions, 2017.
  • Woronow Ilona et Jonathan Fruoco. "Introduction". Imaginaire sériel: Les mécanismes sériels à l'oeuvre dans l'acte créatif. Ed. Jonathan Fruoco et al. Grenoble: UGA Éditions, 2017, p. 9-22.
  • Andrews, Malcolm et Fruoco, Jonathan (trans.). "Fiction sous perfusion : Dickens et la sérialisation". Imaginaire sériel: Les mécanismes sériels à l'oeuvre dans l'acte créatif. Ed. Jonathan Fruoco et al. Grenoble: UGA Éditions, 2017, p. 25-38.
  • Fruoco, Jonathan. "Chaucer as a Sociolinguist: Understanding the Role of Language in Chaucer’s Internationalism". Geoffrey Chaucer. Ed. James M. Dean. Ipswich, Massachusetts: Salem Press, 2017, p. 216-230.
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Fruoco, Jonathan, ed. (2017). Les faits et gestes de Robin des Bois : poèmes, ballades et saynètes. Moyen âge européen (Éd. bilingue ed.). Grenoble: UGA éditions. ISBN 978-2-37747-013-6.
  2. ^ Imaginaire sériel : les mécanismes sériels à l'oeuvre dans l'acte créatif. Ateliers de l'imaginaire. Jonathan Fruoco, Andréa Rando Martin, Arnaud Laimé. Grenoble: UGA éditions, Université Grenoble Alpes. 2017. ISBN 978-2-37747-000-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ "Cambridge Scholars Publishing". www.cambridgescholars.com. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  4. ^ Fruoco, Jonathan (2015). Catalogue Bpi - Document Geoffrey Chaucer : polyphonie et modernité. Michel Houdiard Éditeur. ISBN 978-2-35692-134-5.
  5. ^ Fruoco, Jonathan (12 October 2020). Chaucer's Polyphony: The Modern in Medieval Poetry. Medieval Institute Publications. ISBN 978-1-5015-1436-4.
  6. ^ "Polyphony and the Modern". Routledge & CRC Press. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  7. ^ "Jonathan Fruoco – Humanities Commons". Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  8. ^ "Lone Medievalist Prize for Scholarship – The Lone Medievalist". Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  9. ^ Fruoco, Jonathan (2017). Catalogue Bpi - Document Les faits et gestes de Robin des bois : poèmes, ballades et saynètes. UGA Éditions. ISBN 978-2-37747-013-6.
  10. ^ ORCID. "Jonathan Fruoco (0000-0003-1642-9357)". orcid.org. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  11. ^ Perin Rocha Pitta, Danielle (2017). "Imaginário serial: compartilhamento de arquétipos". Rumores. December 2017: 10–11.