Stephen Maddux, PhD

Stephen Maddux, PhD

Emeritus Professor of French, Modern Languages

Phone: (214) 929-6518

Email: maddux@udallas.edu

Office: Anselm Hall #111

Office Hours: By Appointment

Stephen Maddux, PhD was an associate professor of French at the University of Dallas. He retired in May 2016. He also served as the contact person for the French Program, Fulbright & NSEP grants, Center for Contemplative Studies, the concentration in medieval and renaissance Studies, language concentrations and qualification in French for graduate students.

  • B.A., French & English, University of Dallas, 1971 
  • M.A., Comparative Studies in Literature,University of Chicago, 1973 
  • PhD, Comparative Studies in Literature, University of Chicago, 1979
  • Intro to French Literature (MCTF3305)
  • Intro to Old French (MCTF5315)
  • Elementary French I (MFr1301)
  • Advanced Grammar I (MFr3145)
  • Elementary French II (MFr1302)
  • Intermediate French II (MFr2312)
  • Advanced Grammar II (MFr3146)
  • Intermediate French I & II
  • Advanced French Grammar
  • King Arthur in Europe I / The Search for the Holy Grail
  • King Arthur in Europe II / Lancelot
  • J.R.R. Tolkien: Heroic Fantasy & the Literary Tradition
  • French Symbolist Poetry
  • Introduction to Old French
  • Introduction to Old Occitan
  • Historical Linguistics
  • Literary Tradition One (Eng1301)
  • Literary Tradition Two (Eng1302)
  • Augustine (ClL3334 Latin)
  • Medieval Latin Readings (ClL3335 Latin)
  • Arthurian Romance (Eng5320)
  • Medieval World (Humanities 6326)
  • Renaissance World (Humanities 6327)
  • Co-editing, co-translating, and co-introducing the complete sermons of Petrus Lombardus, aka Peter the Lombard, twelfth-century theologian, for the Dallas Medieval Texts and Translations (Peeters).
  • "La Penitence de Perceval." Communio: Revue catholique internationale (version francaise) 3:5 (1978) 59-69.
  • "The Fiction of the 'Livre' in Robert de Boron's Merlin." Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association 5 (1985) 41-56.
  • "Satan with and without a face in Georges Bernanos." Claudel Studies 13:2 (1986) 22-33