Documents found

  1. 16571.

    Article published in Sociologie et sociétés (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 22, Issue 2, 1990

    Digital publication year: 2002

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    SummaryFor a good number of observers, both from the inside and the outside, Spain seems to constitute an extreme case of identification between Catholicism and the state. This paper, based on two very well documented recent works by M. Diaz-Salazar, professor at the Complutense University of Madrid, attempts to identify solidarities which link Catholicism with the living forces of modern Spain at three points in its history' : the beginning of the century, the triumph of national-Catholicism, and the return of a pluralistic and secularized society. This analysis poses a fundamental question and gives birth to the outline of a socio-religious theory of the sacred as a favored direction for explicative research. It is to be hoped that the detailed study of the social, political and religious evolution of Catholicism within a modern society may help us to better situate the real solidarities experienced by men and women - here and elsewhere - in this end of the century.

  2. 16572.

    Article published in Revue Organisations & territoires (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 33, Issue 1, 2024

    Digital publication year: 2024

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    Research and training have a responsibility in creating new fields of participation for and by civil society. A new kind of territorial engineering is emerging. Using a number of examples, we will highlight the shift that is taking place in the way participatory research is conducted. Indeed, the forms of civil society participation are diversifying. Institutional procedures have led to the mobilization of citizens, who are now in a position to take charge of their own projects. These new areas of participation rely less on power relations, as in the early days of citizen participation in institutionalized mechanisms of governance and regional planning. This turning point is analysed through the prism of the people, the mechanisms of cooperation and collaborative territorial governance, and the coexistence of models.

    Keywords: Territorial development, Développement territorial, food, alimentation, prospective, prospective, young people, jeunes, co-construction, coconstruction

  3. 16573.

    Other published in Eurostudia (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 15, Issue 1-2, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2024

  4. 16574.

    Article published in Transcr(é)ation (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 1, Issue 1, 2022

    Digital publication year: 2022

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    Rivalled in the critical domain by terms such as "transmediality" and "intermediality," or approached from the perspectives of remaking and rewriting, which put less emphasis on the notion of medium than on gestures of repetition within the same "universe," adaptation seems to have become a theoretical horizon of the past. As Sarah Cardwell (2018) notes, by embracing numerous forms of remaking, adaptation studies has, paradoxically, come to do without adaptation and instead finds itself diluted within a larger whole that one might call “intertextual studies”. This article aims to show that the theory of adaptation benefits from encounters with what generally nourishes popular culture: seriality. Several examples of contemporary “neo-Victorian” television series as well as a metacritical analysis of the categories of fictional “world” and “universe” will demonstrate that the conceptual imprecisions between adaptation and intertextuality is also an opportunity to develop theoretical approaches to adaptation that are more open and consider the perpetual expansion of contemporary fictional forms.

    Keywords: adaptation, adaptation, seriality, sérialité, Television series, séries télévisées, Neo-Victorianism, néo-victorianisme, intertextuality, intertextualité

  5. 16575.

    Other published in Archéologiques (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 37, 2024

    Digital publication year: 2024

  6. 16576.

    Article published in Canadian Journal of Higher Education (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 52, Issue 3, 2022

    Digital publication year: 2022

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    The objective of this article is to examine how far the management of internationalization in Quebec universities is characterized by mutuality. Through the analysis of the work of administrative staff in building and managing international partnerships, we examine the practices related to the four goals of mutuality (equity, autonomy, participation and solidarity) in order to identify those that con-cretely contribute to its implementation. An analysis of interviews with nine senior administrators and project managers from three French-language universities and one English-language university suggests a willingness to build transformational partnerships. The findings show a strong commitment to a vision of international partnerships that blends economic and symbolic benefits with social cohesion.

    Keywords: internationalisation, internationalization, partnership, partenariat, gestion, management, universités, universities, mutuality, réciprocité, membres du personnel administratif, administrative staff, Québec, Quebec

  7. 16577.

    Article published in Culture and Local Governance (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 1, Issue 2, 2008

    Digital publication year: 2008

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    Seine-Saint-Denis, industrial and labour department, is historically an earth of reception characterized today by its social variety and its cultural wealth. The culture, which was in suburb the privilege of an elite, knew these last decades a process of alteration and integrates henceforth the variety that offers the urban cultures. The movement of democratization of the culture came along with innovative cultural projects stemming from the popular dynamics. These cultures, which notably appear from a creative youth, incited the urban town councillors to get closer more to the population and to rethink their political approach by conceiving the cultural as an inescapable identical marker pen of the local territory.Artistic manifestations, international events and cultural and sports prestigious equipments integrate multiple networks and are the object of partnership strategies. The stake which constitutes the negative image of Seine-Saint-Denis directs the cultural policies which territorialisent. The speech and the marketing actions which participate in the "stage setting" of a symbolic dimension obey the representations of the territory and the mental perceptions of the urban actors.The deficit of social cohesion from which the department suffers confers besides on the cultural politics a role in the repair of the "social fracture" which characterizes the heterogeneousness of the séquano-dionysien territory.

  8. 16578.

    Article published in Arborescences (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 11, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2022

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    Over the past fifteen years, since the publication of the collective collection Aimititau! Parlons-nous! edited by Laure Morali, several literary and artistic projects have emerged based on a dialogue between Indigenous and non-Indigenous subjects. Among these projects are: « Suite d'automne (correspondance) » and Uashtessiu Lumière d'automne by Rita Mestokosho and Jean Désy (2011), Nous sommes tous des sauvages by Joséphine Bacon and José Aquelin (2013), Kuei, je te salue. Conversation sur le racisme by Deni Ellis Béchard and Natasha Kanapé Fontaine (in a new, augmented edition published in 2020), and many other texts such as Shuni by Naomi Fontaine (2019) that, although they do not explicitly feature a dialogue, are based on an exchange with more or less implicit recipients. This article aims to study and compare, in these texts and collective works, the way in which, beyond the expressed intentions, speech is given or attributed to Indigenous subjects, or else ceded or simply… received. By considering the works in relation to each other, and by maneuvering between the questions of elocution and delocution, as well as questions related to plurilingualism and circular thought, and never forgetting that these works are published in whole or in very large part in the colonial language that is French, the article questions the way in which discourse is orchestrated and asks whether these texts participate in a process of decolonization of speech or if, sometimes or partially or unconsciously, they perpetuate the colonial distribution of discourse?

    Keywords: dialogue, littérature autochtone, discours, énonciation, décolonisation, dialogues, Indigenous literature, discourse, enunciation, decolonization

  9. 16579.

    Other published in RACAR : Revue d'art canadienne (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 49, Issue 1, 2024

    Digital publication year: 2024

  10. 16580.

    Article published in Convergences francophones (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 8, Issue 1, 2023

    Digital publication year: 2023