Dominique Kalifa


Dominique Kalifa is a French historian, professor at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne, where he is director of the Centre of 19th Century History and member of the Institut Universitaire de France. A student of Michelle Perrot, he specialises in the history of crime, transgression, social control, and mass culture in 19th and early 20th France and Europe. He also taught at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris from 2008 to 2015, and was several times "Invited professor" at NYU and "Visiting Scholar" at the University of Saint Andrews. From 1990, he is also columnist for the French newspaper Libération. His study about the underworld and its role in the Western imagination is now translated into portuguese, Spanish and forthcoming in English. His Véritable Histoire de la Belle Epoque, published in 2017, won the Eugene Colas Prize from the Académie Française. He is currently working on a new project about love, Paris and the topographical imagination.

Books

In English : “Crime Scenes: Criminal Topography and Social Imaginary in Nineteenth Century Paris”, French Historical Studies, vol. 27, n° 1, 2004, p. 175-194 ; “Criminal Investigators at the Fin-de-siècle”, Yale French Studies, n° 108, 2005, p. 36-47 ; “What is now cultural history about?”, in Robert Gildea and Anne Simonin, Writing Contemporary History, London, Hodder Education, 2008, p. 47-56; « The Press », in E. Berenson, V. Duclert & C. Prochasson, The French Republic. History, Values, Debates, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 2011, p. 189-196; “Minotaur”, Journal of Modern History, vol. 84, n° 4, 2012, p. 980-982; "Naming the Century: Chrononyms of the 19th Century", Revue d'histoire du XIXe siècle, n° 52, 2016 ; “An Informal History of Herbert Asbury's Underworld“, Medias19, 2018 ; Vice, Crime, and Poverty. How the Western Imagination Invented the Underworld, Columbia University Press, 2019.