Documents found

  1. 22.

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

    Volume 3, Issue 2, 1979

    Digital publication year: 2003

  2. 26.

    Beaudoin, Réjean

    Apologie de l'autre

    Article published in Liberté (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Volume 22, Issue 2, 1980

    Digital publication year: 2010

  3. 27.

    Article published in Liberté (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Volume 25, Issue 2, 1983

    Digital publication year: 2010

  4. 28.

    Article published in Spirale (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 196, 2004

    Digital publication year: 2010

  5. 29.

    Article published in Théologiques (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 22, Issue 2, 2014

    Digital publication year: 2016

    More information

    This paper focuses on John Hagee and his path to become the leader of the largest and most publicized Christian Zionist group in the United States and the world, Christians United For Israel (CUFI). Since 2006, this pastor has become renowned for his support to the Hebrew State. How did Hagee come to create the largest Christian Zionist lobby existing today ? How did he become such a friend of Israel and so remarkable a leader ? What is his background ? This article looks deeper at how an Evangelical pastor became a political public figure capable of rallying large numbers of Evangelicals to follow him in his pro-Israel activism. Hagee is a charismatic leader. Our methodology is based on field studies, interviews and observations.

  6. 30.

    Article published in Études littéraires (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 22, Issue 2, 1989

    Digital publication year: 2005

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    Torn between his languages and his cultures, Kafka embodies otherness. He is studied here from the point of view of heterogeneousness. Among the points discussed in an outline of the mechanisms of Kafka's writing are the sociocultural interspace, the psychic interspace, the "Jewish problem", the question of language, the relation to women and the inscription of the heterogeneous in fiction.