Documents found

  1. 281.

    Article published in Histoire Québec (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Volume 23, Issue 1, 2017

    Digital publication year: 2017

  2. 282.

    Review published in Population (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 20, Issue 2, 1965

    Digital publication year: 2007

  3. 283.

    Review published in Revue de l'histoire des religions (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 199, Issue 1, 1982

    Digital publication year: 2019

  4. 284.

    Thesis submitted to Université du Québec à Montréal

    2021

    More information

    Dans ce mémoire, il sera question d’étudier un aspect de l’imaginaire politique du Québec français. Nous nous pencherons sur l’évolution de ce que nous appelons la mythologie politique de la vulnérabilité et de l’intentionnalité politique qui lui est associée. Dans les mots de l’histoire du Canada français et du Québec, il est question d’étudier la récurrence de la hantise d’un jour voir la nation disparaître parce qu’englouti par la civilisation américaine dominante, la civilisation anglo-saxonne. Nous verrons qu’à cette hantise est associé un projet politique tentant de la conjurer. Peu importe le vocable utilisé par les auteurs, historiens, théoriciens nationalistes, cette intentionnalité peut se résumer ainsi : au péril de l’assimilation qui est le propre de la nation minoritaire doit répondre le projet de composer …

  5. 285.

    Article published in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 23, Issue 1, 1899

    Digital publication year: 2007

  6. 286.

    Article published in Bulletin de correspondance hellénique (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 19, Issue 1, 1895

    Digital publication year: 2018

  7. 287.

    Article published in Dialogues d'histoire ancienne. Supplément (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 4, Issue 1, 2010

    Digital publication year: 2014

    More information

    When elegy dares to pronounce the eulogy of the prince. Cleopatra by Propertius (3.11) : is she an historical figure or an elegiac domina?Why wonder that I am submitted to a woman, when mythology as well as history are bringing up plenty of comparable examples ? Propertius is mentioning the historical figure of Cleopatra at the end of a long list of conqueror mistresses, whose lovers are pitiful personages, and so the Egyptian queen becomes a figure of the elegy. Arousing terror as well as pity, she allows the development of a strange rhetoric of the “big language”, allowing the poet to praise the glory of the new master in Rome. Far away from being used for a propagandistic discourse, the elegy presents itself as the better genre to write down the portrait of Cleopatra. The staging has historical and literary purposes. Recent history is asked to embody the potentialities of a allegedly minor genre. Cleopatra is also a creature in the hands of Propertius, which allows him to glorify his poetical aims, as well as the victory of Caesar.

  8. 288.

    Leavitt, John

    Présentation

    Article published in Anthropologie et Sociétés (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 29, Issue 2, 2005

    Digital publication year: 2005

  9. 289.

    Article published in Romantisme (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 1, Issue 2, 1971

    Digital publication year: 2007

  10. 290.

    Article published in Matériaux pour l'histoire de notre temps (scholarly, collection Persée)

    Volume 28, Issue 1, 1992

    Digital publication year: 2011