Dalhousie University Libraries Hosted Journals
Not a member yet
    6269 research outputs found

    Rattling John\u27s Cage

    No full text

    Their Apartment

    No full text

    Acadian Forest Cyanotype

    No full text

    Northrop Frye Poem

    No full text

    Grey Jay

    No full text

    Experior Magis Quam Intelligam

    No full text

    The Recipe Book

    No full text

    German Occupation, Resistance and the Immediate Postwar Years – The Politicization of Colette and Colette de Jouvenel

    No full text
    Much has been written about Colette’s assertion that women should not engage in political life; she never understood herself as a feminist. Her daughter Colette de Jouvenel, however, initially an unmotivated dressmaker’s apprentice, who spent the 1930s working in the film industry, became a feminist and political activist supporting the Resistance movement. This article focuses on the dynamics between Colette, the famous author, and Colette de Jouvenel, her daughter. In this article, I contend that women’s paramount role in the Resistance movement as well as the role intellectuals held in the Resistance and the influence they exerted on the literary scene of the postwar years, contributed to both women’s politicization. Colette de Jouvenel’s political activism during World War II as well as her committed journalism, recognized by intellectuals during the postwar era, can be seen as a driving force that also contributed to Colette’s desire to embrace a more overt political stance, relativizing her earlier self-portrayal as an apolitical woman and writer.   On a beaucoup écrit sur les déclarations de Colette contre l’engagement politique des femmes. Colette ne s\u27est jamais considérée féministe. En revanche, sa fille Colette de Jouvenel (qui a d\u27abord été, sans grand enthousiasme, apprentie couturière avant de travailler dans l\u27industrie cinématographique pendant les années 1930) a soutenu la Résistance et est devenue militante féministe et politique. Cet essai examine la dynamique entre Colette, la célèbre auteure, et Colette de Jouvenel, sa fille. Dans cet essai, j’avance l’idée que le rôle primordial joué par les femmes dans la Résistance, ainsi que le rôle des intellectuels dans la Résistance et l\u27influence que ceux-ci ont exercée sur le marché littéraire des années d\u27après-guerre, ont contribué à la politisation de Colette et de Colette de Jouvenel. Le militantisme de Colette de Jouvenel pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale et son journalisme engagé, reconnus par les intellectuels de l\u27après-guerre, peuvent être considérés comme un moteur, qui a aussi contribué au désir de Colette d\u27afficher un engagement politique qu’elle rejetait avant la guerre. Elle relativise ainsi l\u27image de femme et d\u27écrivaine apolitique qu\u27elle se donnait auparavant

    Régnier, Henri de. La Double maîtresse. Édition de Franck Javourez

    No full text

    Bonhomme, Béatrice. Monde, genoux couronnés

    No full text

    1,049

    full texts

    6,269

    metadata records
    Updated in last 30 days.
    Dalhousie University Libraries Hosted Journals
    Access Repository Dashboard
    Do you manage Open Research Online? Become a CORE Member to access insider analytics, issue reports and manage access to outputs from your repository in the CORE Repository Dashboard! 👇