Home
Sort
-
Nice
"Chatterbox scribblers"? Women in journals (1918-1968-2018)
« Il est connu que la femme est bavarde et écrivassière ; elle s’épanche en conversations, en lettres, en journaux intimes. Il suffit qu’elle ait un peu d’ambition, la voilà rédigeant ses mémoires, transposant sa biographie en roman, exhalant ses sentiments dans des poèmes [...] « Les femmes ne dépassent jamais le prétexte », me disait un écrivain. C’est assez vrai. Encore toutes émerveillées d’avoir reçu la permission d’explorer ce monde, elles en font l’inventaire sans chercher à en découvrir le sens ». Le jugement quelque peu sévère que Simone de Beauvoir émet dans Le Deuxième Sexe contredit ce qui s’est passé en réalité, et cela a été souligné à maintes reprises : les femmes ont beaucoup écrit et, parmi les formes d’expression qu’elles ont investies, il y a l’écriture dans les revues. « Je parlerai de l’écriture féminine : de ce qu’elle fera », écrit Cixous dans Le rire de la Méduse, et c’est bien de ce qu’a fait l’écriture féminine dans et de la presse périodique (journaux, brochures, revues, etc) que nous entendons parler et faire parler dans ce colloque, en nous intéressant aussi bien à l’analyse des formes de créations artistiques, qu’à l’appréhension du discours médiatique permettant par exemple de saisir les modes de construction du genre.
-
Call for papers - Science studies
Law, ethics and fieldwork: how are research practices changing?
In the analogue era, legal rules were not always known, their interpretation was limited to the question of copyright or respect for the privacy of persons recorded in interviews, and anonymization seemed to be the answer to all outstanding questions. On the contrary, the digital era has given rise to a real reflection on these issues, challenging some of the working methods on the ground. From now on, in addition to the new rules brought by GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), researchers must know how to implement a data management plan or when to inform Data Protection Authorities such as the CNIL (French National Commission of Informatics and Liberty) about methods used to process personal data. They must also take into account the following issues: how to reference witnesses and recordings, what are the rules of long-term preservation, historical exception or data destruction… Can the researcher make an informed decision while on fieldwork while being fully aware of the rights, duties and on consequences of their corpus creation, the constraints on exploitation, dissemination or transmission? What consequences could this have on the gathering, archiving and process of return to the informants?
-
TRANS- 26 (2020)
Of all the imaginative freedoms literature has to offer, the anomaly is certainly the most radical tool that fiction can exploit. However, the anomaly has often been described as a voluntary or involuntary infraction of norms and rules, and this concept has been linked to the “abnormal”. For a long time, the terminological confusion that resulted has hindered a precise reflection on the intrinsic characteristics of the concept of anomaly. Which framework can be designed for these irregularities? How can one build a discourse that preserves the singularity of the “deviation” that the anomaly opposes to norms and normality, without confusing it with the “abnormal”? How does the anomaly violate social, psychological and/or artistic parameters and established frameworks? How does it challenge the reader’s traditional patterns of reception and which new fields does it open to them?
-
Mountains and the collective management of the commons: influences and interactions
Ancestral collective ownership systems linked to village communities, sprouted from feudal law, used to correspond to an agrarian economy that was generally needed for self-subsistence (feeding). This economy gradually deteriorated for a variety of interconnected reasons. Nonetheless, these systems have managed to survive over time, which is rather surprising. Their presence is still strongly felt in rural areas – mainly in mountain regions (France, Italy and Switzerland, in particular). In a contemporary context of agricultural decline, the disappearance of landscapes, declining allocations from the state to communes and the urgent need to preserve natural resources and stimulate rural areas, one has to ask which roles these communities can play to develop the mountain territories in a sustainable way.
Choose a filter
Events
- Past (24)
event format
Languages
Secondary languages
Years
- 2020
Subjects
- Society (18)
- Sociology (8)
- Sociology of work (1)
- Gender studies (1)
- Sociology of culture (1)
- Economic sociology (1)
- Ethnology, anthropology (6)
- Science studies (1)
- Urban studies (2)
- Geography (7)
- History (16)
- Economic history (1)
- Rural history (1)
- Urban history (3)
- Women's history (1)
- Labour history (1)
- Social history (3)
- Economy (3)
- Political economy (1)
- Labour, employment (1)
- Political studies (3)
- Law (1)
- Sociology (8)
- Mind and language (16)
- Thought (5)
- Philosophy (3)
- Intellectual history (1)
- Religion (1)
- Language (7)
- Linguistics (1)
- Literature (6)
- Information (1)
- Representation (6)
- Cultural history (4)
- History of art (2)
- Visual studies (2)
- Cultural identities (1)
- Architecture (1)
- Education (1)
- Epistemology and methodology (3)
- Mapping, imagery, GIS (1)
- Archaeology (1)
- Digital humanities (1)
- Thought (5)
- Periods (12)
- Prehistory and Antiquity (1)
- Middle Ages (2)
- Early modern (4)
- Sixteenth century (1)
- Seventeenth century (2)
- Eighteenth century (1)
- Modern (5)
- Nineteenth century (3)
- Twentieth century (3)
- Prospective (1)
- Prehistory and Antiquity (1)
- Zones and regions (8)
- America (1)
- Europe (8)
- France (2)
- Italy (5)
- Mediterranean regions (2)
- Iberian Peninsula (1)
- America (1)
Places
- Europe (16)