Documents found
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2861.More information
Keywords: siècle, genre, non-dits, roman, sociocritique, poétique, 19th century, gender, silences, novel, sociocriticism, poetics
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2862.
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2864.More information
Keywords: Potin, autofiction, roman-people
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2865.More information
This article aims to understand the making of school exclusion by studying organizational social capital. It is based on an ethnographic case study that took place in a secondary school in a poor and multiethnic area in Montreal. The use of « school form » revealed how some practices that promote academic excellence and focus on school culture can create obstacles to inclusion, by re- producing a norm that contributes to exclude students in vulnerable situations.
Keywords: exclusion, inclusion, social capital, school practices, school form, exclusion, inclusion, capital social, pratiques scolaires, forme scolaire
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2866.More information
This study of two recent fictions (Les rêveries de la femme sauvage and Le jour où je n'étais pas là) evoking certain episodes of the narrator-author's judeo-Algerian youth, attempts to analyze their mtaphorization, in order to understand better some processes of Cixousian writing. References to Jacques Derrida, who shares similar roots with Cixous, help to clarify certain features in the representation of Algeria and the poetic expression of the works. The reference to Emmanuel Levinas and Jean-François Lyotard is used to explain the importance of the ethics of judaism on the double level of representation and narration.
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2867.More information
In his Counterfeiters, André Gide has Édouard, his protagonist, declare that “in art as elsewhere, only purity matters to me”. Above and beyond art or literature, purity is everywhere, pervades everything and is universal. A humanist himself, Gide viewed literature as a means to unify — not divide — Europe and the world through exposure to foreign authors. Yet, does the translation of foreign words and cultures not foster impurity ? Or is purity the expected prerogative of an authentic, national literature ?
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2868.More information
Recent studies of twenty-first century electronic dance music culture (EDMC) highlight the importance of women's creative agency as producers and DJs, and the role EDM plays in women's formation of identity (Farrugia 2012; Hutton 2006; Rodgers 2010). Prior to the 21st century, however, women's roles in club cultures and nightlife economies were more circumscribed, and women frequently took on roles outside the profitable and creative domains of these cultural economies. Despite being relegated to these less prestigious or profitable roles within the EDMC, as well as historically having been neglected and trivialized as participants in subculture dance music scenes, women have been active participants in Montreal's club cultures since the 1950s. Without claiming to be exhaustive, this article offers a historical survey of the various ways in which women participated in Montreal's nightlife from the 1950s to the 1990s, as well as in the EDM and social dance music scenes, from discos to raves.In this paper, that draws on a broader ethnographic and archival project on LGBTQ club cultures in Montreal, are explored the historical experiences of women in club cultures between the 1950s and 1990s. Themes such as nightlife activism, strategies of territorialization and self-determination, the role of the state, musical participation, creation, and technology will be explored in relation to various recreational “spaces” of the city. These spaces include the Red-Light district, the first lesbian-run nightclubs, the “golden age” of feminist and lesbian establishments in the 1980s, and their decline with the emergence of queer culture in the 1990s.
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2869.More information
How do older women grieve a same-sex partner? To better understand this scarcely documented experience, the authors led a qualitative research project during which they conducted 18 interviews with 10 women over the age of 65 from the Greater Montreal area, in Canada, who had faced this loss. The authors look at the ways in which their participants define their community, how these ties change over time and their impact on the experience of grief. They present their participants' perceptions of existing resources as well as their hopes for the future.
Keywords: effet d'exclusion, femmes âgées, intersectionnalité, orientation sexuelle, mort, vieillissement
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2870.