Women and Children in Exile in and from France, 1830-1939

Jul 14, 2022  | 2:30 - 4:00pm ET

Keynote Lecture on Zoom | Speaker: Delphine Diaz (University of Reims)

Watch a recording of the lecture  

This keynote lecture is part of the Second Annual International Seminar in Historical Refugee Studies "Historicizing the Refugee Experience, 17th–21st Centuries" taking place at GHI Washington July 13-16, 2022. The lecture will be streamed via Zoom for non-conference participants who are interested in joining. 

The figure of the refugee has long been perceived as a man headed into solitary exile. However, if we re-examine the case of France as a land of departure and of asylum, other protagonists of forced migrations come into view, namely women and children, often treated as a single entity by the authorities. Starting in the 1830s and going through to the eve of the Second World War, this paper complicates the typical portrait of the refugee, shedding light on the place and increasing role played by women and children in exile, in France and in Europe.

 

About the Speaker


Delphine Diaz is an Associate Professor in History at the Université de Reims since 2014 and a Research Fellow of the Institut universitaire de France since 2020. Prior to joining she received her Ph.D. from the Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne in 2012. Her first book, Un asile pour tous les peuples? Exilés et réfugiés étrangers en France au cours du premier XIXe siècle, won the Augustin Thierry Prize for history. Between 2016 and 2020, she coordinated the AsileuropeXIX research program, “Towards a European history of exile and asylum during the 19th century,” funded by the Agence nationale de la recherche. She is the author of a book on the history of the refugees in Europe, En exil. Les réfugiés en Europe de la fin du XVIIe siècle à nos jours (Gallimard, 2021).