Dr Sophie Watt

BA, MA, PhD

School of Languages, Arts and Societies

Lecturer

Dr Sophie Watt
Profile picture of Dr Sophie Watt
s.watt@sheffield.ac.uk
+44 114 222 2883

Full contact details

Dr Sophie Watt
School of Languages, Arts and Societies
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
Sheffield
S3 7RA
Profile

I studied history as an undergraduate at the University of Paris VII where I also completed a Masters Degree in colonial history working on the rise of the nationalist movement in Cambodia.

After a few years of teaching in France and Scotland I completed a Masters Degree in French and Francophone literature and an interdisciplinary PhD in Modern French History and Literature at the University of Iowa. Following the completion of my doctoral thesis on 鈥楾he Discursive Construction of Minority Identities in Modern France鈥 I took up a Teaching Fellowship at the University of Aberdeen before joining the department of French at the 爆料TV.

Qualifications
  • BA (Paris VII)
  • MA (Paris VII)
  • MA, PhD (University of Iowa, USA)
Research interests
  • Colonial and neo-colonial history, literature and cinema
  • Cultural history and memory
  • Postcolonial theories of textuality and discourse analysis (production and writing of history)
  • Trauma and Violence in Contemporary France
  • Identity constructions (Jewish and colonized in particular)
  • Critical Discourse analysis and Translation Studies

I am currently working on a number of projects dealing with France鈥檚 neo-colonial involvement in its former colonies and on a collaborative project, with Dr Amanda Crawley Jackson, dealing with the representation of migration in France: Calais in Focus: The Bigger Picture, the Longer Story. I am preparing a monograph entitled The French Neo-colonial Republic: Haiti, Mali and Central African Republic, the New Wars on/of Terror. I am also working on a book project with Dr Amanda Crawley Jackson.

Publications

Journal articles

  • Savioli Marques Tavares A & Watt S (2025) . Journal of Refugee Studies, 38(2), 470-474.
  • Watt S (2020) . New Readings, 17(2), 105-123.
  • Watt SL () France and the 鈥榃ar on Terror鈥: Mali 2013. The Journal of the Middle East and Africa.

Book chapters

  • Watt SL (2021) Teaching the 2004 coup in Haiti from a French perspective: Insights into France's neocolonial culture and practices In Accilien C & Orlando VK (Ed.), Teaching Haiti: Strategies for Creating New Narratives (pp. 137-165). Florida University Press
  • Watt SL (2017) Voicing the Silence: Exposing French Neo-Colonial History and Practices in Mathieu Pernot鈥檚 Les Migrants In Chadderton H & Kimyong眉r A (Ed.), Engagement in 21st Century French and Francophone Culture University of Wales Press
  • Watt SL (2014) 鈥溌 Un pass茅 qui ne passe pas 禄鈥n myst猫re sans cesse red茅couvert In Kimyong眉r A & Wigelsworth A (Ed.), Rewriting Wrongs French Crime Fiction and the Palimpsest (pp. 31-47). Cambridge Scholars Pub
  • Watt SL (2011) Alexandre Arcady and the re-writing of French Colonial History in Algeria In Marsh K & Frith N (Ed.), France's Lost Empires: Fragmentation, Nostalgia, and La Fracture Coloniale (pp. 69-80). Lexington Books
  • Watt SL (2010) The Discursive Construction of Minority Identities in Third Republic France: The 1937 Madagascar Plan, Exemplification of Republican Racism In Frendo H (Ed.), The European Mind: Narrative and Identity (pp. 236-240). Malta University Press
  • Watt SL (2009) Comparative Analysis of Three 鈥楬uman鈥 Exhibitions: The Semiotic Construction of the Jewish and Colonised subjects. In Rorato L & Saunders A (Ed.), The Essence and the Margin: National Identities and Collective Momeries in Contemporary European Culture (pp. 37-50). Rodopi
  • Watt SL () 鈥淭eaching the 2004 coup in Haiti from a French perspective: an Insight into global Neo-Imperial Culture and Practices". In Orlando VK & Accilien C (Ed.), Teaching Haiti Beyond Literature: Intersectionalities of History, Literature and Culture

Conference proceedings

  • Watt S (2020) Elisa Larvego鈥檚 Chemin des dunes : beyond a critical ethnography of Calais. Invisible Wounds, Negociating Post-Traumatic Landscapes (pp 97-103). Sheffield, 5 March 2020 - 5 March 2020.
Research group

PhD thesis supervision:

  • Maryam Shams, (2018 - now) 鈥楾he Evolution of Media Practices in Conflicts: A Case Study of France in Chad (1968-2014)鈥
  • Amanda Tavares, (2018 - now) 'Contemporary Art, Women and the Mediterranean'
  • Harriet Orkney (Sheeld, 2015 - present), main supervisor, 鈥淕eopolitical Comparative Analysis of foreign interventions in Haiti, Chad and C藛ote d鈥橧voire.鈥 (French Studies and Business School)
  • Thomas Jackson, co-supervision, 鈥淭he French colonial mind: an insight into the pivotal role of La loi-cadre De鈫礶rre.鈥 (French Studies and History) (Completed 2018)

I am interested in supervising research in the following areas:

  • Colonial and neo-colonial history.
  • Inter-war period and Vichy France (History, Literature and cinema).
  • Cultural memory
  • Trauma and violence in contemporary France
  • Critical discourse analysis and translation studies
Teaching activities

Postgraduate


鈥 FRE6663/4 MA in French Studies: Constructions of the Body (a unit on 鈥楲e Juif et la France鈥)
鈥 FRE6700 MA in French Studies: Advanced Translation from French
鈥 FRE6653 /6654 French Cultural Studies I & II (a unit on Minority Identities in Modern France: 鈥榟uman exhibitions鈥)

Undergraduate


I teach French language at all levels, and the following modules


鈥 FRE289/90 French Cultural Studies
鈥 FRE281/2 French Revolutionary Traditions
鈥 FRE385/6 Constructions Identitaires dans la France du XXe si猫cle
鈥 FRE 387/98 Ha茂ti : La Trag茅die Histoire, politique et litt茅rature de l鈥櫭﹑oque coloniale 脿 nos jours

Professional activities and memberships
  • Subject Director for French
  • Director of Pastoral Care for SLC