1,640 research outputs found

    Au temps des Pharaons, par M. A. Moret, conservateur, adjoint du Musée Guimet. Paris, Armand Colin

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    Darlu Jeanne. Au temps des Pharaons, par M. A. Moret, conservateur, adjoint du Musée Guimet. Paris, Armand Colin. In: La revue pédagogique, tome 55, Juillet-Décembre 1909. pp. 196-197

    Pierre-André SIGAL. Les marcheurs de Dieu : pèlerinages et pèlerins au Moyen Age. Paris, Armand Colin, 1974. In-16, 160 pages. (Collection « U Prisme », 39.)

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    Vielliard Jeanne. Pierre-André SIGAL. Les marcheurs de Dieu : pèlerinages et pèlerins au Moyen Age. Paris, Armand Colin, 1974. In-16, 160 pages. (Collection « U Prisme », 39.). In: Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes. 1976, tome 134, livraison 2. pp. 448-449

    Usages de l'inspiration dans les Poésies et cantiques spirituels de Jeanne-Marie Guyon

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    Cet article montre comment le recueil des Poésies et Cantiques spirituels de J.-M. Guyon (1722) utilise la figure de l’auteure divinement inspirée afin de restaurer le pouvoir charismatique qu’elle a su occuper auprès de ses disciples. Trois dispositifs sont examinés : la préface du recueil qui définit la valeur sacrée de son inspiration ; le péritexte comme manière d’ordonner le déploiement pragmatique de cette inspiration ; le texte poétique comme énonciation « apostolique ».Uses of Inspiration in Jeanne-Marie Guyon’s Poésies et Cantiques spirituels This paper aims at showing how Jeanne Guyon’s books of collected poems Poésies et Cantiques spirituels (1722) use the figure of a divinely inspired author in order to restore the charismatic power she was fulfilling as regards her disciples. Three settings are examined, namely the books’ preface, which defines the sacred value of Guyon’s inspiration; the peritext as a means of a pragmatic rolling-out of such inspiration; and the poetic text as an “apostolic” enunciation

    Poet and author Judith Kerman reads her selected works at the Michigan Writers Series

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    Poet and author Judith Kerman reads selected poems, including the English translation of poems by Cuban poet Dulce Mar\ueda Loynaz, and answers questions from audience. Kerman is introduced by Michigan State University Librarian Jeanne Drewes. Part of the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Held in the Main Library

    Jeanne Messager, ethnologue et ambassadrice du costume normand

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    Jeanne Messager fut une figure éminente de la vie culturelle normande pendant plus d’un demi-siècle. Il existe pourtant très peu d’écrits consacrés à son œuvre : quelques passages dans L’Histoire de l’Office Municipal de la Jeunesse d’Édouard Colin ; Marie-Thérèse Duflos-Priot y fait référence dans son ouvrage Les groupes folkloriques en France et l’exposition Costume-Coutume réalisée par le musée national des Arts et Traditions populaires en 1987 prend l’exemple de Jeanne Messager pour illus..

    Author Lecture: Jeanne Marie Laskas, Hidden America (2012)

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    Hidden America From Coal Miners to Cowboys, an Extraordinary Exploration of the Unseen People Who Make This Country Work Reviews | Sneak a PEEK Five hundred feet underground, Jeanne Marie Laskas asked a coal miner named Smitty, “Do you think it’s weird that people know so little about you?” He replied, “I don’t think people know too much about the way the whole damn country works.” Hidden America intends to fix that. Like John McPhee and Susan Orlean, Laskas dives deep into her subjects and emerges with character-driven narratives that are gripping, funny, and revelatory. In Hidden America, the stories are about the people who make our lives run every day—and yet we barely think of them. Laskas spent weeks in an Ohio coal mine and on an Alaskan oil rig; in a Maine migrant labor camp, a Texas beef ranch, the air traffic control tower at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, a California landfill, an Arizona gun shop, the cab of a long-haul truck in Iowa, and the stadium of the Cincinnati Ben-Gals cheerleaders. Cheerleaders? Yes. They, too, are hidden America, and you will be amazed by what Laskas tells you about them: hidden no longer

    Practices of Speculation

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    This volume offers innovative ways to think about speculation at a time when anticipation of catastrophe in an apocalyptic mode is the order of the day and shapes public discourse on a global scale. It maps an interdisciplinary field of investigation: the chapters interrogate hegemonic ways of shaping the present through investments in the future, while also looking at speculative practices that reveal transformative potential. The twelve contributions explore concrete instances of envisioning the open unknown and affirmative speculative potentials in history, literature, comics, computer games, mold research, ecosystem science and artistic practice

    Final Project Report: A Seat at the Table: Integrating the Needs and Challenges of Underrepresented and Socially Vulnerable Populations into Coastal Hazards Planning in New Jersey

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    The purpose of this report is to: Summarize approach, outcomes and deliverables of this project; Highlight current evidence regarding impacts of changing climate-related coastal hazards on socially vulnerable populations; Identify opportunities to address needs of socially vulnerable populations as part of coastal community climate resilience planning; Outline possible options for coastal management policy that may enhance efforts to address needs of socially vulnerable populations as part of coastal community resilience efforts. This report is organized with a distinct chapter dedicated to each of the four purposes outlined above followed by a bibliography and appendices.Completed for: The New Jersey Coastal Zone Management Program; New Jersey Department of Environmental ProtectionMay 31, 202

    Gender practices and relations at the Jamaat Al Muslimeen in Trinidad

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    In an effort to bring into view critically—as actors rather than as spectacle—Muslim men and especially Muslim women in non-Islamic countries and to examine their constitutive individual as well as collective religious and social identities—that is their contextual realities as opposed to just the ideal of Islam—this project seeks via ethnographic research to investigate gender practices and relations among Muslims at the Masjid al Muslimeen and Madressa located in Trinidad and Tobago. This small community’s mundane yet resilient existence amid national, global, historical, geographical, physical, and sociopolitical ambivalences and contradictions begs revisiting how we read, interpret, represent, and deploy extant categories, theories, and methodologies articulating gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, religion, and nation.  Ph.D.Includes bibliographical referencesby Jeanne P. Baptist

    [Jeanne Williams, 1968]

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    Photograph of Jeanne Williams. The accompanying press release tucked behind the photograph states "AUTHOR PICKS SOUTHWEST COLLECTION -- Southwestern novelist and historian Jeanne Williams, shown at her working desk, has named the Southwest Collection at Texas Tech repository for her papers. (Tech Photo)&quot
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