4,187 research outputs found

    Letter From Claude Monet to George Petit

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    abstract: Concerning a letter written from Claude Monet to George Petit.Transcription Details: Transcription forthcoming

    Some Reactions to the Black Manifesto (Johnson), 1969

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    Editorial in the National Baptist Forum newspaper, by Reverend Dr. Louis Johnson, Pastor of Friendship Baptist Church, Detroit, MIchigan, titled "Some Reactions to the Black Manifesto," delivered aloud by the author of the manifesto, James Forman, at the annual meeting in Kansas City, Missouri in 1969. Claude W. Black, Jr. was editor at the time

    Claude A. Buss Interview

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    Professor Claude Albert Buss is interviewed for the Naval Postgraduate School's student-run magazine, The Classmate, as part of its December 1994 - January 1995 issue.Professor Claude A. Buss is an area specialist on Asia on staff at the Naval Postgraduate School whose career includes stints as an ambassador to China, the Philippine Islands and Japan as well as professorships at the University of Southern California, Stanford University and San Jose State University. He is the author of numerous books on war and diplomacy in Asia and was recently cited for teaching excellence in the National Security Affairs curriculum. He lives with his wife of five years in Palo Alto. He recently granted an interview to Classmate writer Connie Lynch. Following are excerpts from that interview

    « Face chevaline » et « tête d’échassier » : la caricature anthropozoomorphe dans l’œuvre de Claude Simon

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    De nombreux personnages simoniens sont décrits selon des procédés de déconstruction largement employés dans la caricature : la distorsion des traits de leur visage et leur disproportion anatomique les dotent de caractéristiques physiques animales et les métamorphosent en figures hybrides. Pour autant, le caractère satirique de la caricature animalière réalisée dans les descriptions simoniennes pose question, dans la mesure où l’auteur revendique de ne pas être un moraliste. L’article se propose ainsi d’interroger l’influence de la caricature anthropozoomorphe du xixe siècle sur l’écriture de Claude Simon, à la fois dans ses dimensions esthétique et éthique, entre effet de collage, satire sceptique et figures grotesques.Many Claude Simon’s characters are described with deconstructive processes widely used in caricature. The distortion of their facial features and their anatomical disproportion endow them with animal characteristics and metamorphose them into hybrid figures. However, Claude Simon’s animal caricatures are not necessarily of a satirical nature, since the author claims not to be a moralist. This article explores the question of the influence of anthropozoomorphic nineteenth-century caricature on Claude Simon’s writing both in its aesthetic and ethical dimensions, between collage effect, sceptical satire and grotesque figures

    Claude Simon, un écrivain « romanesque » ? Figures et postures de l’auteur dans l’œuvre, dans la théorie et dans les médias

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    Dans les romans de Claude Simon, les représentations de la figure de l’auteur constituent autant d’avatars, de modèles ou contremodèles possibles. Dans ses écrits théoriques et ses interventions médiatiques, Simon a également construit une théorie de l’auteur qui fait écho à ces figures fictives. Cet ensemble transversal et cohérent finit par générer une image de Claude Simon lui-même et de la conception simonienne du romancier, dans un jeu romanesque entre vie et œuvre, entre fictif et biographique.In Claude Simon’s novels, the representations of the figures of the author are made of so many avatars, models or counter-models. In his theoretical essays and his media activities, Simon has also built a theory of the author which echoes these fictional figures. This coherent and transversal whole builds up a picture of Simon himself and also gives a picture of the conception of Simon as a novelist, setting a novelistic game closely intertwined between life and the work and between fictional and biographical

    Corps de l’écrivain et érotisme littéraire chez Claude Simon

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    De Triptyque (1973) au Jardin des Plantes (1997), l’écriture de Claude Simon a connu d’importantes évolutions. Cet article le montre en étudiant ce qui a trait au corps dans ces deux romans. Le corps est en effet un analyseur méconnu de la poétique simonienne et de ses mutations au fil de l’œuvre. La lecture des deux romans donne à voir que le corps de l’écrivain en tant que tel est porté par une exigence d’autonomie scripturale toujours plus forte, qui fait de l’écriture la matière même d’un engagement spécifiquement littéraire. Dans Le Jardin des Plantes, cet engagement anime l’écrivain à telle enseigne qu’il le porte à relever le défi d’un érotisme littéraire dont il est non seulement l’auteur, mais l’acteur.From Triptyque (1973) to Le Jardin des Plantes (1997), Claude Simon’s writing underwent major changes. This paper aims to show this by focusing on everything related to the body in these two novels. The body turns out to be an underestimated factor in analysing Simon’s poetical devices throughout his work. The two mentioned novels allow to see that the writer’s body as such is constantly sustained by an ever increasing demand for its autonomy, which turns Simon’s writing into the very matter of a specifically literary commitment. In Le Jardin des Plantes, this commitment impels the novelist to the extent it leads him to address the challenge of a literary eroticism, in which he is involved not only as an author, but as an actor

    Portrait of Senator Claude Denson Pepper.

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    Handwritten inscription: \u27To \u27Sketer\u27 Johnston from his admiring friend Claude Pepper\u27https://egrove.olemiss.edu/fmjohnston/1255/thumbnail.jp

    Claude McKay, circa 1933

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    A portrait of Claude McKay. Written on recto: Claude McKay, author of "Banjo" and "Home to Harlem," whose new novel, "Banana Bottom," will be published by Harper & Brothers on March 29th, has been living in Spain and Morocco for the last three years. The background of his novel is the island of Jamaica, British West Indies, where Mr. McKay was born. Written on verso: For Harold Jackman After a five year interval wit[?] the same sentiment. Claude McKa

    Brick Found at Claude Thillet's Home

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    http://digiport.athabascau.ca/3d/abdla/2013_0534/2013_0534.phpPhotograph - Broken brick found at Claude Thillet's home in 200
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