Rechercher
Bibliographie complète 1 717 ressources
-
This thesis explores the rivalries between Jesuit, Recollect and Sulpician missionaries in the 17th century in New France. Specifically, it examines the polemical discourse about the missionaries, whether it came from religious competitors or from members of the colonial administration. Although these missionaries were all part of a common apostolic project, the sources reveal that different networks were struggling at the time so that some missionaries could enjoy a monopoly over the souls of the colony, while others were relegated to the background. In this nascent Church, several disagreements that raged between these three religious families can help to explain the tensions that we find in their writings. The main issues were the francization of the First Nations and the founding of the bishopric of Quebec. Furthermore, the rivalries between the Jesuits, the Recollects and the Sulpicians went far beyond the spiritual framework and regularly led to commercial issues. Certain missionaries, the Jesuits in particular, were accused throughout the century by various actors of enriching themselves in various ways, and of engaging in the fur trade. Rather than focusing on the veracity of these attacks, this thesis proposes to analyze them and to try to understand their origin and function. These accusations must also be put in relation to the rivalries that the missionaries had to face in their other missions during the same period.
-
The French Resistance press was born following the defeat of France and the signing of the armistice with Germany in June 1940. It embodied the will of some French citizens to refuse the occupation and to represent an alternative to Vichy France. In addition to countering official propaganda, the underground newspapers published their vision of the France to be rebuilt in the post-war period. Our master’s thesis analyzes the perception of the Allies in the French Resistance press between 1940 and 1944, in order to highlight the extent to which France's place in the world is visible through the vision shown of the three great powers, who are allies, but who could represent threats after the Liberation. The portraits of the Allies allow us to analyze and understand the plans and concerns of the Resistance. Based on a discursive, diachronic and thematic analysis of the clandestine newspapers, we are able to show that the perception of the Allies evolves during the course of the war, moving from a generally positive view between 1940 and 1942 to a more critical perception in the spring of 1944. At the beginning of the war, the Resistance offered a portrait of the Allies based on their military strength. Nevertheless, from 1943 onwards, it had to protect the population and gain legitimacy. This change strengthened the Resistance and allowed it to gradually impose itself as the authority protecting French interests in the face of Allies whose postwar intentions were increasingly criticized.
-
This dissertation focusses on the Breve storia, a medical biography published in September 1744 by physician and anatomist Giovanni Bianchi. This novella recounts the life and autopsy of a young Roman servant, Giovanni Bordoni, known in many villages in Tuscany as an enthusiastic seducer and womanizer, until his death on June 28th, 1743. At this point, when the body is stripped for the autopsy, the physician notes female reproductive organs. In fact, even though Bordoni led his adult life under a male identity, his biological sex becomes a subject of discussions and writings after his death, immortalizing him as a woman with same-sex desires, cross-dressed as a man. However, by delving into sexuality and gender as they were understood in early modern Europe, this dissertation deconstructs two main claims: first, that female same-sex desires were intrinsically linked to clitoral hypertrophy, second, that gender existed only in a strict normative link to the biological sex. Thus, by analyzing the Breve storia and Bianchi’s correspondence with his readers, it is possible to shed light on the diverse ways of naming and understanding female homoeroticism in the 18th century, linking it for example with genital anatomy, psychology, and emotions. This master’s thesis highlights that, while the early moderns considered that gender’s essence is found in sex, they could understand it as sometimes fluid, but also as not fully masculine or feminine.
-
Abstract This thesis focuses on the prevention of early childhood accidents in the Middle Ages. Through the study of three compilations of miracula, we will analyze the thematic of the child that they present. These compilations are the Miracles of the Blessed Virgin by Gautier de Coincy, the Miracles of Nostre-Dame de Chartres by Jean le Marchant and the Rosarius. In this study, we will look at the diversity of normative discourses surrounding this theme. These analyze allow us to take stock of the precautions surrounding children in the Middle Ages. We conclude that the Miracles of Nostre-Dame de Chartres are not representative of the general miracula corpus, cause the miracula it contains present a preventive character more focused on the physical dangers faced by the child.
-
Based on a comparative study of the communities that migrated from India to French Indochina and British Burma, this thesis examines the place of Indian migrants in these two colonies during the first half of the 20th century. Indian minorities had a special place in the colonial system because of their various legal status, political and economic influence, and intermediary roles. These dynamics and the interest in studying them are illustrated by three specific case studies: 1. the dispute between Indian police officers and the municipality of Saigon in 1907; 2. Negotiations during the separation of Burma from the British Raj in 1935; 3. the repercussions of the 1929 stock market crash on government discourse on these communities and their place in colonial settings. The interaction of Indian minorities with colonial administrations indicates their understanding of imperial workings. They illustrate their skillful navigation of government structures and their mobilization to defend their interests. The analysis of their position as intermediaries highlights how minority communities have used their relationships to bypass lines of authority and power and sheds light on the plurality of hierarchical axes in colonial situations. These three case studies provide a more holistic conceptualization of colonial Indian minorities and support their complexity, highlighting their ambiguous allegiances and how they define and redefine themselves. The colonial authorities' speeches on those communities highlighted the link between the desirability of Indian minorities and Indian minorities and the need for their presence in the two colonies. This thesis helps deepen our understanding of what an empire is and the complex place that groups deemed homogenous and marginal may have occupied within it.
-
Leveraging an original dataset on coastal shipping and invoking a new economic geography framework, we study the effects of domestic and international trade costs on industrial concentration and productivity growth in interwar Brazil. In the great wave of globalization before 1914, international trade costs were low and domestic costs high. Economic activity was dispersed along the coastline. The interwar period saw a reversal: international costs surged and domestic costs declined. Economic activity was increasingly concentrated in São Paulo. Agglomeration economies enabled productivity growth in the 1930s, mostly in durable and capital goods.
-
En dialogue avec des recherches récentes menées sur les identités multiples des chrétiens de l’Antiquité tardive, cette contribution propose un cas d’étude sur les sermons adressés au peuple de l’évêque gaulois Césaire d’Arles (vers 470-542), plus précisément sur ceux dans lesquels Césaire aborde les pratiques de ses contemporains face à l’abondance d’enfants et l’infertilité, leurs pratiques de guérisons et leurs cultures festives en lien, notamment, avec les fêtes des saints. Miroirs de situations communicationnelles précises, ces sermons permettent de saisir, malgré leur aspect rhétorique, les tensions existant entre le discours épiscopal de Césaire traitant des enjeux de pastorale et de pouvoir épiscopal d’une part, et l’adhésion des chrétiens à des pratiques sociales, jugées incompatibles avec une identité chrétienne d’autre part. Ces sermons montrent en filigrane l’existence d‘une opposition entre deux modèles d’organisation de références identitaires : un modèle pyramidal qui classe toutes les références identitaires par rapport à la seule christianité versus un modèle latéral de ces mêmes références qui suppose qu’en fonction de situations quotidiennes concrètes, la christianité revêtait, pour les croyants, une importance variable. Ce cas d’étude ne permet pas seulement de souligner l’importance d’un regard scientifique équilibré sur les croyances et les pratiques, mais aussi les limites d’une classification de pratiques jugées tantôt religieuses, tantôt sociales.
-
Historiography of ancient monastic trends has been deeply renewed during the recent years thanks to several conferences which put forward comparative and interdisciplinary approaches, some of them being specifically dedicated to female forms of religious life. Henceforth, scholars dissuade us to read the history of monasticism trough 'Benedictine glasses'. They invite us to take into account every type of sources - written, archaeological, iconographic, epigraphic. The interpretation of the written sources - monastic rules, but also hagiographical and diplomatic sources - has been nowadays deeply renewed. These recent works agree to give to early 'monasticism' a wider definition, taking into account the extreme diversity of the community forms of religious life attested in the West during this period. These works deserve to be continued further through comparative studies focused on precise problematics. This research project aims to explore how some communities tried to reconcile the practice of a monastic life with the service of an important sanctuary, and also how some ancient communities succeeded in holding firm through centuries, often with the support of powerful protectors.
-
"Gender, Mediation and Popular Education in Venice, 1760-1830 examines how women with enough cultural capital could turn their identity as representatives of "the public" - those on the receiving end of education - to their advantage, producing knowledge under the guise of relaying it. Author Susan Dalton looks at the question of how elite women turned their reputation for ignorance into an opportunity to establish themselves as authors at the dawn of the nineteenth century in Venice. Many literary figures saw women as a group in need of education. By deploying essentialist understandings of femininity, whereby women possessed superior moral virtue but deficient rationality, these women entered the publishing world as cultural mediators, identified by contemporaries as key players in the social projects of public education and moral edification central to the European Enlightenment. Focussing on Isabella Teotochi Albrizzi and Giustina Renier Michiel, both renowned Venetian authors, the author introduces two well-known Italian women of letters to English-speaking scholars; re-evaluates the impact of their writing in Italy and raises questions about female authorship across Europe; broadens our conceptions of gender norms; and enriches our knowledge of a little-known period of women's writing in Italy. This volume is an essential resource for students and scholars alike interested in women's and gender history, early modern history and social and cultural history"--
-
An article from Cap-aux-Diamants, on Érudit.
Explorer
Années
Corps professoral
- Arsenault, Mathieu (9)
- Ayangma Bonoho, Simplice (14)
- Barton, Deborah (12)
- Belony, Lyns-Virginie (7)
- Blennemann, Gordon (23)
- Bonnechere, Pierre (61)
- Bouchard, Carl (31)
- Carley, Michael Jabara (22)
- Dagenais, Michèle (28)
- Dalton, Susan (13)
- Deslandres, Dominique (49)
- Dewar, Helen (5)
- Genequand, Philippe (15)
- Hamzah, Dyala (18)
- Huberman, Michael (44)
- Hubert, Ollivier (28)
- Larochelle, Catherine (10)
- Meren, David (13)
- Perreault, Jacques Y. (31)
- Raschle, Christian (15)
- Robinson, Rebecca (5)
- Saul, Samir (66)
- Tipei, Alex (6)
- Wierda, Meagan (3)
Professeur.e.s honoraires et émérites
- Angers, Denise (10)
- Baillargeon, Denyse (24)
- Dessureault, Christian (10)
- Dickinson, John A. (12)
- Keel, Othmar (6)
- Létourneau, Paul (11)
- Lusignan, Serge (14)
- Michel, Louis (4)
- Morin, Claude (7)
- Ownby, David (22)
- Rabkin, Yacov (13)
- Ramirez, Bruno (27)
- Rouillard, Jacques (61)
- Trépanier, Pierre (28)
- Wien, Thomas (10)
Professeur.e.s associé.e.s et invité.e.s
- Monnais, Laurence (35)
- Poulin, Joseph-Claude (23)
- Tousignant, Noémie (6)
Chargé.e.s de cours
- Bellavance, Eric (27)
- Buffet, Rodrigue (3)
- Carrier, Marc (8)
- Desrosiers-Lauzon, Godefroy (6)
- Fu, Nanxin (8)
- Giguère, Amélie (15)
- Hatton-Proulx, Clarence (6)
- Lake-Giguère, Danny (4)
- Lapalme, Alexandre (4)
- Laramée, Dominic (21)
- Lewis, David (4)
- Marceau, Guillaume (12)
- Massoud, Sami (3)
- Ménard, Caroline (3)
- Mesli, Samy (3)
- Paulin, Catherine (8)
- Poirier, Adrien (1)
- Poitras-Raymond, Chloé (4)
- Sollai, Luca (9)