7 research outputs found

    Françoise Lempereur, dir., Patrimoine culturel immatériel

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    Au-delĂ  de houleux dĂ©bats sur les dĂ©nominations comme culture traditionnelle et folklore, culture traditionnelle et populaire, patrimoine oral et immatĂ©riel, l’ouvrage – qui, sur cette question, a suivi la position de l’Organisation des Nations Unies pour l’éducation, la science et la culture (Unesco) avec sa Convention pour la sauvegarde du patrimoine culturel immatĂ©riel (PCI, 2003) – est un trĂ©sor, un document riche dont la lecture des six (denses) parties est fluide et captivante. Dans la ..

    Identité éditoriale, identités sportives

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    Le Dossier analyse l’assignation d’identitĂ©s catĂ©gorielles aux sportifs de haut niveau dans la presse. Les Échanges Ă©tudient l’intervention par l’image. Les Notes de recherche traitent la « relation diagnostique », la maniĂšre dont l’UniversitĂ© rend hommage Ă  ses membres dĂ©cĂ©dĂ©s, le rapport entre ludique et marchand d’un parc d’attraction pour enfants, l’expertise du jazz, le complotisme sur Facebook et la diversitĂ© des langues dans la musique populaire. En VO suit les reprĂ©sentations mĂ©diatiques de la violence genrĂ©e aux USA. Le Focus porte sur Les SensibilitĂ©s religieuses blessĂ©es de Jeanne Favret-Saada et 33 Newport Street de Richard Hoogart. Les Notes de lecture recensent 50 ouvrages. The media discourse on sport often focuses on elite athletes and assigns to them categorical identities (class, gender, race, origin, age
) for various emblematic purposes (for example, national heroes, representatives of a territory, of a culture
). The Issue analyzes these identification logics and their variations – according to editorial strategies and the readers communities built – in the specialized press and the sport sections of the generalist press, without forgetting to consider their reception by the athletes themselves. The Exchanges extend AndrĂ© Gunthert’s discussion on the intervention through the image. The Research Notes explore the “diagnostic relationship” for patients with West Syndrome and their families, how universities honor their deceased members, the relationship between play, commercial and educational practices in a children amusement park, the expertise of jazz in France, the conspiracy speeches on Facebook and the diversity of languages in French popular music. In Original Version, US researcher Lisa Cuklanz revisits three decades of work on representations of gendered violence in mainstream media. The Focus section provides an in-depth reading of a recent work by Jeanne Favret-Saada – Hurt Religious Feelings. Christianity, Blasphemy and Films, 1965-1988 – and on an older one by Richard Hoggart – A Local Habitation, 1918–40. The Book Reviews offer succinct overviews and analyses of more than 50 publications
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