8 research outputs found

    Emile Vuillermoz et la naissance de la critique de cinéma en France

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    Heu Pascal Manuel. Emile Vuillermoz et la naissance de la critique de cinéma en France. In: 1895, revue d'histoire du cinéma, n°24, 1998. pp. 54-75

    Faking evidence - Nobody framed that wasn't guilty. Mise au point sur l'attitude d'Émile Vuillermoz sous l'Occupation. Quand un journaliste (cinématographique) traite d'histoire (du cinéma d'abord, de la Seconde Guerre mondiale ensuite)...

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    Heu Pascal Manuel. Faking evidence - Nobody framed that wasn't guilty. Mise au point sur l'attitude d'Émile Vuillermoz sous l'Occupation. Quand un journaliste (cinématographique) traite d'histoire (du cinéma d'abord, de la Seconde Guerre mondiale ensuite).... In: 1895, revue d'histoire du cinéma, n°29, 1999. pp. 89-104

    Cinematon #2226: Pascal Manuel Heu

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    https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/fixation-db-experimental-film/2148/thumbnail.jp

    Lucien Rebatet, Quatre ans de cinéma (1940-1944)

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    S’agissant de cet ouvrage rassemblant les critiques d’un auteur mais à l’initiative d’autres que lui (Philippe d’Hugues – qui a déjà édité les textes d’Astruc –, Pascal Manuel Heu qui s’est auparavant consacré à Vuillermoz, ainsi que Philippe Billé et Marc Laudelout), on doit relever d’emblée une ambiguïté, celle de la signature. Lucien Rebatet signait de son nom ses critiques musicales, ses romans ou textes autobiographiques et ses essais, mais il signa la plupart de ses critiques de cinéma ..

    Une histoire de l’Écran français

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    Les communications donneront lieu à la publication d’un numéro hors-série de 1895, revue d’histoire du cinéma.International audienceCette journée a été l’occasion de renouveler la connaissance d’un périodique à la fois connu et méconnu de la presse cinématographique française de l’après Deuxième Guerre mondiale afin d’enrichir l’histoire de la critique française, de la cinéphilie et des débats « de fonds » qui ont pu la nourrir dont certains eurent et ont encore des prolongements au-delà de l’existence même de l’Écran français. Interventions de François Albera, Joël Daire, Claire Daniélou, Jean Gili, Roxane Hamery, Pascal Manuel Heu, Pascal Laborderie, Morgan Lefeuvre, Laurent Le Forestier, Fabien Le Tinnier, Paola Palma, Nataliya Puchenkina, Geneviève Sellier, Vivien Soldé, Léo Souillés-Debats, Guillaume Vernet et Valérie Vignaux

    A rockslide-generated tsunami in a Greenland fjord rang Earth for 9 days

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    Climate change is increasingly predisposing polar regions to large landslides. Tsunamigenic landslides have occurred recently in Greenland (Kalaallit Nunaat), but none have been reported from the eastern fjords. In September 2023, we detected the start of a 9-day-long, global 10.88-millihertz (92-second) monochromatic very-long-period (VLP) seismic signal, originating from East Greenland. In this study, we demonstrate how this event started with a glacial thinning–induced rock-ice avalanche of 25 × 106 cubic meters plunging into Dickson Fjord, triggering a 200-meter-high tsunami. Simulations show that the tsunami stabilized into a 7-meter-high long-duration seiche with a frequency (11.45 millihertz) and slow amplitude decay that were nearly identical to the seismic signal. An oscillating, fjord-transverse single force with a maximum amplitude of 5 × 1011 newtons reproduced the seismic amplitudes and their radiation pattern relative to the fjord, demonstrating how a seiche directly caused the 9-day-long seismic signal. Our findings highlight how climate change is causing cascading, hazardous feedbacks between the cryosphere, hydrosphere, and lithosphere.acceptedVersio

    ReSurveyEurope: A database of resurveyed vegetation plots in Europe

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    Aims: We introduce ReSurveyEurope — a new data source of resurveyed vegetation plots in Europe, compiled by a collaborative network of vegetation scientists. We describe the scope of this initiative, provide an overview of currently available data, governance, data contribution rules, and accessibility. In addition, we outline further steps, including potential research questions. Results: ReSurveyEurope includes resurveyed vegetation plots from all habitats. Version 1.0 of ReSurveyEurope contains 283,135 observations (i.e., individual surveys of each plot) from 79,190 plots sampled in 449 independent resurvey projects. Of these, 62,139 (78%) are permanent plots, that is, marked in situ, or located with GPS, which allow for high spatial accuracy in resurvey. The remaining 17,051 (22%) plots are from studies in which plots from the initial survey could not be exactly relocated. Four data sets, which together account for 28,470 (36%) plots, provide only presence/absence information on plant species, while the remaining 50,720 (64%) plots contain abundance information (e.g., percentage cover or cover–abundance classes such as variants of the Braun-Blanquet scale). The oldest plots were sampled in 1911 in the Swiss Alps, while most plots were sampled between 1950 and 2020. Conclusions: ReSurveyEurope is a new resource to address a wide range of research questions on fine-scale changes in European vegetation. The initiative is devoted to an inclusive and transparent governance and data usage approach, based on slightly adapted rules of the well-established European Vegetation Archive (EVA). ReSurveyEurope data are ready for use, and proposals for analyses of the data set can be submitted at any time to the coordinators. Still, further data contributions are highly welcome
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