The Karla Scherer Center for the Study of American Culture

and the John W. Boyer Center in Paris present

 

The Making of Americans – Paris, 1925

 

Marking the 100th anniversary of the publication of Gertrude Stein’s novel,

this conference asks how Americans were made, unmade, and remade by a city

that drew artists, musicians, dancers, and writers across the Atlantic, often for years.

Featuring:

Yasna Bozhkova, Université Paris Nanterre

Bill Brown, University of Chicago

Brad Evans, Rutgers University

Jonathan Flatley, University of Chicago

Jennifer Iverson, University of Chicago

Tina Post, University of Chicago

Cécile Roudeau, Université Paris Cité

Sabine Sielke, University of Bonn

Chloé Thomas, Université Paris Cité

Babette Tischleder, University of Göttingen

Kenneth Warren, University of Chicago

 

Friday, May 16th, 2025

1:30–6:00 pm

Saturday, May 17th, 2025

10:00–5:30 pm

John W. Boyer Research Center in Paris

41 rue des Grand Moulins

75013 Paris, France

 

Register here

 

In 1925, Contact Editions Press (founded in Paris by Robert McAlmon) published 500 copies of The Making of Americans—the 925-page novel that Gertrude Stein had written between 1903 and 1911.  Celebrating the 100th anniversary of that event, this conference asks how Americans were made, unmade, and remade by a city whose cultural magnetism famously drew artists, musicians, dancers, and writers across the Atlantic, often for years.  

 

If you had been in Paris in 1925 you could have purchased Stein’s novel at Shakespeare & Compnay, and you could have seen and heard the first performance of Josephine Baker’s Revue Négre; the Exposition internationale des arts decoratifs et industriels modernes that defined art deco; the premiere of films by Jean Epstein, René Clair, and Jean Renoir; and the first exhibition of surrealist painting at the Galerie Pierre.  You could have enjoyed the sonic and visual extravaganza of everyday life that took the place of the war years.   

 

Though Americans traveled to Paris throughout the 19th century, it is Les Années Folles that have assumed mythic proportions.  However well known, the list of Americans who found their way to Paris, and often to Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas, remains remarkable: Langston Hughes and Cole Porter, Man Ray and Jessie Fauset, Djuna Barnes and Kay Boyle, Aaron Copeland and Josephine Baker, Ezra Pound and Sylvia Beach, Berenice Abbott and Archibald Motley, Harry and Caresse Crosby .  . . which is to say not just Hemingway and Fitzgerald.  While the story of American life in Paris has been the topic of memoires, histories, and novels, the conference participants have been asked to travel less explored avenues, to trace exchanges and events that changed Americans—”their own way of beginning, their own way of ending, their own way of working, their own way of having loving inside them,” in Stein’s words.  

 

The conference also celebrates the opening of the University of Chicago’s new Paris Center as a hub for international scholarly exchange.  At the site, the Karla Scherer Center for the Study of American Culture will convene conferences, symposia, and workshops focused on the political, social, and cultural histories of the United States.

 

This program is free and open to all. Space is limited; we ask that you please register. We hope you can join.

 

Friday, 16 May

 

1:30pm: Bill Brown – University of Chicago

Introduction: Remaking Americans

 

2:00pm: Babette Tischleder – University of Göttingen

Like a Duck to Water: Berenice Abbott’s Art and Photographic Vision

 

3:00pm: Cécile Roudeau – Université Paris-Cité

“Paris Black,” 1925: When “la Révolution française” Meets La Revue Nègre (Anna Julia Cooper, Jesse R. Fauset, and Josephine Baker)

 

4:00pm: Brad Evans – Rutgers University

Après, Avant: Edith Wharton’s 1920s

 

5:00pm: Jennifer Iverson – University of Chicago

Hearing 1925 Paris

 

Saturday, 17 May

 

10:00am: Sabine Sielke – University of Bonn

Gertrude Stein, Memory, and the Memory of Gertrude Stein

 

11:00am: Chloé Thomas – Université Paris-Cité

“We are back in Paris”: the transatlantic, multilingual story of a late Stein piece

 

12:00pm: Tina Post – University of Chicago

Anything Special: Black America, American Paris, and Nella Larsen’s Quicksand

 

1:00 – 2:00pm LUNCH BREAK

2:00pm: Kenneth Warren – University of Chicago

Repetition and Making it New: The Making of Americans, The New Negro, and the Sociological Project of Modernism

 

3:00pm: Yasna Bozhkova – Université Paris Nanterre

“Gay Paree” or “Desolate City”: Claude McKay, Gwendolyn Bennett and the (Un)Making of Black Americans in Paris

 

4:00pm: Jonathan Flatley – University of Chicago

The Time to Make Queer People

 

5:00pm: Bill Brown – University of Chicago

Closing Remarks

 

5:15– 6:30pm RECEPTION

 

 

For more information on the Karla Scherer Center and other future events, visit our website.