Documents found

  1. 16371.

    Massuet, Jean-Baptiste

    Introduction

    Published in: Animation sur pellicule à l’ONF / Drawing on Film Animation at NFB , 2024 , Pages 1-6

    2024

  2. 16372.

    Massuet, Jean-Baptiste

    Choix de la pellicule

    Published in: Animation sur pellicule à l’ONF / Drawing on Film Animation at NFB , 2024 , Pages 7-13

    2024

  3. 16373.

    Massuet, Jean-Baptiste

    Support de travail

    Published in: Animation sur pellicule à l’ONF / Drawing on Film Animation at NFB , 2024 , Pages 23-29

    2024

  4. 16374.

    Massuet, Jean-Baptiste

    Gravure du son sur pellicule

    Published in: Animation sur pellicule à l’ONF / Drawing on Film Animation at NFB , 2024 , Pages 41-45

    2024

  5. 16375.

    Massuet, Jean-Baptiste

    Visionnage des oeuvres

    Published in: Animation sur pellicule à l’ONF / Drawing on Film Animation at NFB , 2024 , Pages 46-50

    2024

  6. 16376.

    Other published in Enfances, Familles, Générations (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 48, 2025

    Digital publication year: 2025

    More information

    Research framework: The research examines the misalignment of family trajectories with institutional frameworks and the temporal desynchronization of life course. The new imaginaries influencing family choices are analyzed by exploring the tensions between institutional and individual rationales. Objectives: The aim of this issue, “Life course and Temporalities of the Family: New Imaginaries, New Injunctions,” is to understand and analyze family changes through the concept of life course, in light of two major changes over the last 50 years: the denormalization and deinstitutionalization of life course.Methodology: The articles in this issue are underpinned by a brief review of the literature on the concept of life course, viewed in the context of some of the latest family changes. Approaches that are essentially qualitative (interviews, focus groups, observations, etc.) are drawn from different disciplinary fields: sociology, anthropology and social work. The issue is based on the research expertise of the authors who contributed to it.Results: This issue highlights the evolution of family formation, the family imaginaries that underpin it and the political norms with which it is framed.Conclusions: It appears that the new support structures proposed by the state to secure life course are failing to normalize increasingly numerous and deregulated family transitions and the desynchronization of lives. This issue shows how individuals manage both to comply with these imperatives and to turn them on their head, demonstrating innovative ways of forming a family. Contribution: The contribution of this issue is in line with a field of research that examines the life course in both the scientific and the social spheres. The issue documents ways of forming a family at a time when life course are evolving independently from institutional frameworks, while at the same time the state is attempting to regulate family trajectories. It provides information on the diverse and fragmented temporalities of family formation. The various articles show how family trajectories are structured around imagined and new constructions of the family, which manifest as individual demands to maintain control over their own life course.

    Keywords: parcours de vie, imaginaires familiaux, temporalités, transitions, dénormalisation, détraditionnalisation, désinstitutionnalisation, life course, family imaginaries, temporalities, transitions, denormalization, detraditionalization, deinstitutionalization, curso de vida, imaginarios familiares, temporalidades, transiciones, desnormalización, destradicionalización, desinstitucionalización

  7. 16377.

    Négroni, Catherine, Robin, Pierrine, Gaudet, Stéphanie and Baslyk, Valentina

    Life course and Temporalities of the Family: New Imaginaries, New Injunctions

    Other published in Enfances, Familles, Générations (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 48, 2025

    Digital publication year: 2025

    More information

    Research framework: The research examines the misalignment of family trajectories with institutional frameworks and the temporal desynchronization of life course. The new imaginaries influencing family choices are analyzed by exploring the tensions between institutional and individual rationales. Objectives: The aim of this issue, “ Life course and Temporalities of the Family: New Imaginaries, New Injunctions, ” is to understand and analyze family changes through the concept of life course, in light of two major changes over the last 50 years: the denormalization and deinstitutionalization of life course.Methodology: The articles in this issue are underpinned by a brief review of the literature on the concept of life course, viewed in the context of some of the latest family changes. Approaches that are essentially qualitative (interviews, focus groups, observations, etc.) are drawn from different disciplinary fields: sociology, anthropology and social work. The issue is based on the research expertise of the authors who contributed to it.Results: This issue highlights the evolution of family formation, the family imaginaries that underpin it and the political norms with which it is framed.Conclusions: It appears that the new support structures proposed by the state to secure life course are failing to normalize increasingly numerous and deregulated family transitions and the desynchronization of lives. This issue shows how individuals manage both to comply with these imperatives and to turn them on their head, demonstrating innovative ways of forming a family.Contribution: The contribution of this issue is in line with a field of research that examines the life course in both the scientific and the social spheres. The issue documents ways of forming a family at a time when life course are evolving independently from institutional frameworks, while at the same time the state is attempting to regulate family trajectories. It provides information on the diverse and fragmented temporalities of family formation. The various articles show how family trajectories are structured around imagined and new constructions of the family, which manifest as individual demands to maintain control over their own life course.

    Keywords: parcours de vie, imaginaires familiaux, temporalités, transitions, dénormalisation, détraditionnalisation, désinstitutionnalisation, life course, family imaginaries, temporalities, transitions, denormalization, detraditionalization, deinstitutionalization, curso de vida, imaginarios familiares, temporalidades, transiciones, desnormalización, destradicionalización, desinstitucionalización

  8. 16378.

    Other published in Recherches sociographiques (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 66, Issue 3, 2025

    Digital publication year: 2025

  9. 16379.

    Champion, Emmanuelle, Mongo-Desage, Michelle, Raufflet, Emmanuel, Weissenberger, Sebastian and Croutzet, Alexandre

    Introduction - L’économie circulaire dans le Sud global : un état des lieux des discours, des politiques et des pratiques

    Other published in VertigO (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 24, Issue 3, 2024

    Digital publication year: 2025

    More information

    Keywords: économie circulaire, Sud global, secteur informel, processus institutionnels, cartographie des acteurs, innovation sociale, tensions, circular economy, Global South, informal sector, institutional processes, stakeholder mapping, social innovation, tensions

  10. 16380.

    Article published in Atlantis (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 31, Issue 1, 2006

    Digital publication year: 2006

    More information

    In this article, I examine the autofictional narrative Whore by Quebec writer Nelly Arcan, demonstrating how the psychoanalytic confession of the "whore" narrator (whom we are tempted to confuse with the author) inserts itself into a project of women's genealogy. Following a symbolic death, the narrator gives birth to her story and succeeds in placing herself within the tradition of écriture au féminin. She wishes to remember the women of past generations who have been subjected to male desire and silenced; however, her very act of appropriating language in the name of women is ambiguous in that she herself is often complicit in their objectification and degradation.