Documents found

  1. 324.

    Article published in Études littéraires africaines (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 44, 2017

    Digital publication year: 2018

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    Why do some Africanist scholars feel they need to write a life story or a travel diary before or after a scientific monograph that resulted in a field survey ? Would the first form simply have a residual dimension, thus reduced to the appendix status of the second, or, on the contrary, would the two be complementary ? These problems cover a relatively wide field and period, ranging from the practice of reflexivity among human and social scientists – Michel Leiris, Georges Balandier and Jean-Loup Amselle – to the continuities and overlaps observed in literary and critical studies – Alain Ricard, Bernard Mouralis, Valentin Yves Mudimbe, Manthia Diawara, etc. It is favor continuities over than ruptures, we should put the term of « second book at the ethnographer », by Vincent Debaene, into perspective preferring that of the double book, favorable to the overlaps between productions, beyond genres.

  2. 325.

    Article published in Études littéraires africaines (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 40, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2016

  3. 327.

    Other published in Culture (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 11, Issue 1-2, 1991

    Digital publication year: 2021

  4. 328.

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

    Volume 7, Issue 2, 1983

    Digital publication year: 2003

  5. 329.

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

    Volume 32, 2008

    Digital publication year: 2009

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    AbstractThe « forced disappearance » in Argentina questions the capacity of anthropology to approach violence and its unspeakable elements. Before entering such a minefield it is necessary to examine our own internal feelings. Our ethnographical position is made up of changeable feelings of empathy, involvement and detachment and questions the relationship of sense in the society which surrounds and forms us, while at the same time experimenting with that same society's capacity for self-destruction. In this article I intend to examine what I consider to be the possible doble involvement of the researchers: the reconstruction of sense and the rebuilding of relationships. Confronted by ‘social death' the anthropologist may participate in a social dynamic of recognition (as a reconstruction of a social and political link resulting from a reciprocal relationship). Taking part in this dynamic means that its ethical and political implications are also called into question. Faced with denial, with the depersonalization and elimination of the other, we need to follow the way of individualization, of intimity. It indeedy reminds us that crimes against humanity were first perpetrated against that which is most intimate. This anthropological approach, involved by the side of victims of “disappearance”, and developed in conjunction with them, is experienced as a rebirth of sense, as a journey which leads us from wounded intimacy towards history and collective memory (D. Fassin, F. Laplantine, C. Coquio). In short, I'm trying to transmit the intimate to make possible thinking terror.

    Keywords: Verstraeten, disparition, terreur, émotion, implication, reconnaissance, Verstraeten, disappearance, terror, emotion, involvement, recognition

  6. 330.

    Article published in Recherches sociographiques (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 11, Issue 3, 1970

    Digital publication year: 2005