Université Sorbonne Nouvelle

The Sorbonne Nouvelle University (French: Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, also known as Université Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris 3, Paris 3, Sorbonne Nouvelle and the Sorbonne) is a public liberal arts and humanities university in Paris, France. It is one of the inheritors of the historic University of Paris,[1] which was completely overhauled and restructured in 1970.

Sorbonne Nouvelle University
Université Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris 3


MottoL'université des cultures (French)
Motto in English
The university of cultures
TypePublic
Established1971 (1971) (following the division of the University of Paris, founded: c. 1150)
ChancellorFrançois Weil
Chancellor of the Universities of Paris
PresidentJamil Dakhlia
Students19,360
Undergraduates7,572
Postgraduates7,904
3,252
Location,
48°50′42″N 2°23′49″E
Websiteuniv-paris3.fr
Université Sorbonne Nouvelle is located in Paris
Université Sorbonne Nouvelle
France Paris

History

The historic University of Paris first appeared in the second half of the 12th century, but was reorganised in 1970 as 13 autonomous universities after the student protests of the French May. Sorbonne Nouvelle, or "Paris III", is one of the inheritors of University of Paris faculty of humanities ("arts et lettres").[1]

University sites

The Sorbonne Nouvelle has sites at various locations in Paris. The main university centres are:

Chapel of the main Sorbonne building

Central Sorbonne Building — central administration offices, Literature

Entrance of the main building of the Sorbonne Nouvelle university, built in by Christian de Portzamparc, Campus Nation, Paris.

Nation – the main teaching site, named after the arrondissement (since 2022)

Maison de la Recherche – Located rue des Irlandais in the Latin Quarter, it is the university's main research centre and facility.

Bibliothèque Sainte Barbe and Bibliothèque Sainte Geneviève – Located near the Pantheon in the Latin Quarter, those two research libraries are owned and managed by Sorbonne Nouvelle University.

The university also occupied several other locations until 2022:

Bièvre — houses teaching and research facilities for language study and the main staff and student refectories

Rue Saint-Jacques — French as a Foreign Language

Rue des Bernardins — The Linguistics and Phonetics department

Rue de l'École-de-Médecine — English Studies

Entrance of one of the buildings of the University Sorbonne Nouvelle, 5 rue de l'École-de-Médecine, Paris. Formerly buildings for the royal school of drawing under Louis XV

Rue Saint-Guillaume — Latin American Studies

Place du Maréchal-de-Lattre-de-Tassigny — Houses the E.S.I.T (School of Interpreting and Translation)

Asnières – located outside of Paris, where the German Studies department, now closed, was housed.[2]

In 2022, the Censier Campus, located rue Censier, was abandoned.

University libraries

The Sorbonne Nouvelle has one central and five specialised libraries (Foreign language and culture and French literature). It is also connected to the Sainte-Geneviève Library, the Central Sorbonne Library, the Inter-University Library for Oriental Languages and the Sainte-Barbe Library.

University press

The Presses Sorbonne Nouvelle publishes research carried out by the university.[3]

Accommodation and refectories

The CROUS de Paris (Centre régional des œuvres universitaires et scolaires) is the organisation responsible for both student accommodation and refectories in Paris. It runs various student halls of residence and student restaurants both in central Paris and in its outskirts.

Sorbonne Paris Cité Alliance

Sorbonne Nouvelle University tried to become a member of Sorbonne Paris Cité Alliance, which groups together several Parisian universities. Due to opposition from students and professors, the project did not succeed.

QS World University Rankings

In 2023, the QS World University Rankings ranked the Sorbonne Nouvelle University as follows:[4]

  • Linguistics: 96 (3rd in France)
  • Modern Languages: 151-200 (5th in France)
  • English language and literature: 151-200 (3rd in France)
  • Arts and Humanities: 215 (6th in France)


This ranking includes both universities and public and private educational institutions without distinction.

Notable alumni

  • Alan García - President of Peru
  • Olivier Assayas - French film director and screenwriter
  • Jacques Aumont - Film Professor
  • Latifa Ben Mansour - Algerian writer and linguist
  • Alain Bergala - French film director
  • Jean Bessière - Academic and writer
  • Frédéric Bozo - Academic
  • Bruno della Chiesa - Linguist
  • Arnaud Desplechin - French film director
  • Mike Downey, Film producer
  • Cédric Klapisch - French Film Director (L'Auberge Espagnole, Les poupées russes, Paris)
  • Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu - French actor
  • Olivier Ducastel - French film director
  • Mireille Guiliano - French-American author
  • René Gutman: Ph.D., a former philosophy student, Rabbi of Strasbourg
  • Martine L. Jacquot - writer, journalist
  • Miro Kovač - Croatian Foreign Minister
  • Dalit Lahav-Durst - Brazilian art historian
  • Laila Marrakchi - French film director
  • Predrag Matvejevic - Writer and academic
  • Imanol Ordorika Sacristán - Mexican social activist
  • Sigurður Pálsson - Icelandic author
  • Pedro Paulet - Peruvian scientist
  • Homa Sayar - Iranian Poet
  • Jean-Pierre Thiollet - French author
  • Patricia de Souza - Peruvian writer
  • Maryse Condé - French (Guadeloupean) novelist

Professors and former professors

  • Henri Adamczewski
  • Jacques Aumont
  • Louis Bazin
  • Raymond Bellour
  • Alain Bergala
  • Jean Bessière
  • Pascal Bonitzer
  • Frédéric Bozo
  • Linda Cardinal
  • Michel Chion
  • Serge Daney
  • Latifa Ben Mansour
  • Michel Marie
  • Stéphane Michaud
  • Luc Moullet
  • Annie Ousset-Krief
  • Maria Isaura Pereira de Queiróz
  • Josette Rey-Debove
  • Jean-Pierre Sarrazac
  • Danica Seleskovitch

See also

References

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