Natalie Zemon Davis

Natalie Zemon Davis
Natalie Zemon Davis by David Levine

Natalie Zemon Davis is the Henry Charles Lea Professor of History Emeritus at Princeton and Professor of Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. She is the author most recently of Trickster Travels: A Sixteenth-Century Muslim Between Worlds. (May 2008)

From the Review

May 15, 2008: The Quest of Michel de Certeau

The Capture of Speech and Other Political Writings translated from the French and with an afterword by Tom Conley, edited and with an introduction by Luce Giard

The Certeau Reader edited by Graham Ward

Heterologies: Discourse on the Other translated from the French by Brian Massumi, foreword by Wlad Godzich

Culture in the Plural translated from the French and with an afterword by Tom Conley, edited and with an introduction by Luce Giard

The Mystic Fable, Volume One: The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries translated from the French by Michael B. Smith

The Practice of Everyday Life translated from the French by Steven F. Rendall

Michel de Certeau: Interpretation and Its Other by Jeremy Ahearne

The Writing of History translated from the French by Tom Conley

The Possession at Loudun translated from the French by Michael B. Smith, with a foreword by Stephen Greenblatt

April 6, 2006: It Wasn't Leo (letter)

February 1, 1996: Hope for Labor (letter)

May 28, 1992: The Budapest Review of Books (letter)

April 26, 1990: A Modern Hero*

Marc Bloch: A Life in History by Carole Fink

January 19, 1989: Razing Romania (letter)

November 19, 1987: A New Montaigne*

Montaigne in Motion by Jean Starobinski, translated by Arthur Goldhammer

July 18, 1985: Happy Endings*

The Birth of Purgatory by Jacques Le Goff, translated by Arthur Goldhammer

February 2, 1984: Revolution and Revelation*

The Age of the Cathedrals: Art and Society, 980-1420 by Georges Duby, translated by Eleanor Levieux, by Barbara Thompson

The Three Orders: Feudal Society Imagined by Georges Duby, translated by Arthur Goldhammer

July 21, 1983: The Geremek Case (letter)

April 10, 1969: Deforming the Reformation*

Religion and Regime by Guy E. Swanson

Books by Natalie Zemon Davis

Slaves on Screen: Film and Historical Vision (2000)
The Gift in Sixteenth-Century France (2000)
Confronting the Turkish Dogs: A Conversation on Rabelais and His Critics (1998)
Remaking Impostors: From Martin Guerre to Sommersby (1997)
Women on the Margins: Three Seventeenth-Century Lives (1995)
Fiction in the Archives: Pardon Tales and Their Tellers in Sixteenth Century France (1987)
The Return of Martin Guerre (1983)
Society and Culture in Early Modern France: Eight Essays (1975)