Documents found

  1. 2391.

    Article published in Nouvelle Revue Synergies Canada (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 11, 2018

    Digital publication year: 2018

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    Keywords: Prononciation, Phonétique, FLE

  2. 2392.

    Other published in Percées (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 5, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2023

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    Keywords: autrices, XVII siècle, paratextes, ironie, humour

  3. 2394.

    Article published in Les Cahiers des Dix (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 16, 1951

    Digital publication year: 2021

  4. 2395.

    Article published in Les Cahiers des Dix (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 18, 1953

    Digital publication year: 2021

  5. 2396.

    Article published in Protée (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 39, Issue 2, 2011

    Digital publication year: 2011

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    We examine the front pages of tourist guides of France, Spain and Portugal. In the three cases, they are addressed to foreigners. Each territory must convey a specificity and has its own particular characteristics in the absolutely competitive atmosphere of the proliferation of tourist sites. In this way, an identity is constructed by a discourse made with words and icons that are used to reflect the country at issue. So the guide's front pages provide a special access to a reality, which is pars pro toto reduced to some representations, which become familiar. Therefore we will discuss how these elements construct emblems of identity.

  6. 2397.

    Article published in Mémoires du livre (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 2, Issue 1, 2010

    Digital publication year: 2011

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    The author examines the career of Simon Lacourt, a Bordeaux printer who was guillotined during the French Revolution, and explores the ways in which printers' milieu and patrons determined their printing choices. Lacourt -- the last in a long line of King's printers in Bordeaux -- was one of the most privileged and connected printers in the reign of Louis XVI when he made the move into revolutionary printing and became a newspaper printer and the official printer for the Department of the Gironde. His printing business prospered until the summer of 1793 when he became the official printer of the commission populaire, the body that led the federalist revolt in Bordeaux, a fateful decision dictated by his social, familial and political milieu and one that left him vulnerable after the revolt failed. During his trial he was accused of trying to destroy his country and his fate raises questions about printer responsibility during the Revolution.

  7. 2398.

    Article published in Recherches féministes (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 28, Issue 2, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2015

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    The term « diversity » is gaining in popularity as it highlights efficiently the mythical norm of the universal social subject. Its various usages indicate that the meanings of diversity and heterogeneity are intermingled, leading to a semantic confusion between both terms. The authors compare the heuristic value of the terms to think out emancipation. They expose a series of analytical considerations emphasizing the necessary differentiation between the normative nature of the political usages of diversity and the social fact of heterogeneity. They further dwell upon the complexity of conceptualizing resistance showing the inescapable, yet seldom considered, ternary nature of any power relation.

    Keywords: diversité, hétérogénéité intragroupe, domination, rapports sociaux, intersectionnalité, émancipation

  8. 2399.

    Parizeau, Gérard

    Pages de journal

    Other published in Assurances (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 41, Issue 3, 1973

    Digital publication year: 2023

  9. 2400.

    Article published in Revue québécoise de droit international (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 10, 1997

    Digital publication year: 2023

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    The population of South Africa has long been divided by racial segregation. Inspired by the new era of human rights and democracy, a movement developed that condemned apartheid at a national and at an international level. The General Assembly followed by the Security Council responded to the pressures of African and Asian states who demanded that South Africa be excluded from participating in international organizations as long as the regime remained unchanged. These demands gave rise to the complete diplomatic isolation of South Africa on November 12, 1974. The isolation lasted until 1994 and was accompanied by a critical struggle against apartheid. After twenty years of isolation, the country abolished its segregation policies and reorganized its entire regime. South Africa was reintegrated into the international legal System and admitted to intergovernmental organizations as an effective participant. This historical and political evolution consecrated fundamental human rights in the internal legal structure of South Africa. Ethnocentrism was rejected as well as racism in all of its expressions and the new regime chose to adhere to a model of unity "in the context of diversity".