Affiche du document Amusons-nous en chansons !

Amusons-nous en chansons !

Luc Barney

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Affiche du document Best Of 60e Anniversaire

Best Of 60e Anniversaire

Sheila

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Affiche du document Les Rois mages

Les Rois mages

Sheila

  • Variété française
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Affiche du document 50 ans de Podium

50 ans de Podium

Claude Francois

  • Pop / Rock
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Affiche du document Age tendre  La tournée des idoles, Vol. 4

Age tendre La tournée des idoles, Vol. 4

Bernard Sauvat

  • Variété française
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Affiche du document Desire of the Analysts

Desire of the Analysts

Sheila

3h21min00

  • Etudes littéraires
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268 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h21min.
Explores psychoanalytic approaches to cultural studies.Explores psychoanalytic approaches to cultural studies.Why do we continue to desire psychoanalysis? What can this desire contribute to a vital cultural criticism? In Desire of the Analysts, these and other questions are addressed by leading contributors from a variety of fields, including Sharon Nell, Deneen Senasi, Kaja Silverman, Henry Sussman, Domietta Torlasco, Pierre Zoberman, and Slavoj Zðizûek. They argue for the urgency of a psychoanalytic criticism that is at once intellectually vibrant, politically engaged, and uniquely able to illuminate the psychic motivations and gratifications underlying a range of contemporary cultural phenomena. These phenomena include nationalistic violence, the formation of normative masculinity, the psychic appeal of domination and submission, and the place of the "queer" desire in counterhegemonic practices. The contributors explore the role of psychoanalysis in shaping the future of cultural criticism; elaborate on innovative ways to approach group dynamics from a psychoanalytic perspective; rethink psychoanalytic understandings of authorship; and offer original interpretations of the intersections between gender, sexuality, and domination. Desire of the Analysts demonstrates that psychoanalysis remains an indispensable resource for critiquing our contemporary condition.Acknowledgments Introduction Greg Forter and Paul Allen Miller Part One  Psychoanalysis and the Future of Cultural Criticism 1. Sartre, Politics, and Psychoanalysis: It Don’t Mean a Thing if It Ain’t Got das Ding Paul Allen Miller 2.Psychoanalysis, Religion, and Cultural Criticism at the New Millennium Henry Sussman Part Two  Psychoanalysis and Collectivity 3. Lacan’s Four Discourses: A Political Reading Slavoj Žižek 4.Signs of Desire: Nationalism, War, and Rape in Titus Andronicus, Savior, and Calling the Ghosts Deneen Senasi Part Three  Psychoanalysis and the Author 5. Moving beyond the Politics of Blame: Let Us Now Praise Famous Men Kaja Silverman 6. F. Scott Fitzgerald, Psychobiography, and the Fin-de-Siècle Crisis in Masculinity Greg Forter Part Four  Psychoanalysis and Sexuality 7. Desiring Death: Masochism, Temporality, and the Intermittence of Forms Domietta Torlasco 8. Sadistic and Masochistic Contracts in Voltaire’s La pucelle d’Orléans and Graffigny’s Lettres d’une Péruvienne; or, What Does the Hymen Want? Sharon Diane Nell 9. Queer(ing) Pleasure: Having a Gay Old Time in the Culture of Early-Modern France Pierre Zoberman Contributors Index
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Affiche du document Strengthening the African American Educational Pipeline

Strengthening the African American Educational Pipeline

Sheila

3h00min00

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
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240 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h00min.
One of the most comprehensive books examining the experiences of African Americans throughout the educational enterprise.One of the most comprehensive books examining the experiences of African Americans throughout the educational enterprise.2008 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Focusing on pre-K–12 schools, higher education, and social influences, this book examines the following question: What systemic set of strategies is necessary to improve the conditions for African Americans throughout the educational pipeline?Acknowledgments Foreword Gloria Ladson-Billings Preface William B. Harvey Introduction A Systematic Analysis of the African American Educational Pipeline to Inform Research, Policy, and Practice Jerlando F. L. Jackson Part I: Pre-K–12 Schools 1. The Forgotten Link: The Salience of Pre-K–12 Education and Culturally Responsive Pedagogy in Creating Access to Higher Education for African American Students Tyrone C. Howard 2. Teaching in "Hard to Teach in" Contexts: African American Teachers Uniquely Positioned in the African American Educational Pipeline Jennifer E. Obidah, Tracy Buenavista, R. Evely Gildersleeve, Peter Kim, and Tyson Marsh 3. Bringing the Gifts That Our Ancestors Gave: Continuing the Legacy of Excellence in African American School Leadership Linda C. Tillman Part II: Higher and Postsecondary Education   4. Descriptive Analysis of African American Students’ Involvement in College: Implications for Higher Education and Student Affairs Professionals Lamont A. Flowers 5. The Status of African American Faculty in the Academy: Where Do We Go From Here? Barbara J. Johnson and Henrietta Pichon 6. A National Progress Report of African Americans in the Administrative Workforce in Higher Education Jerlando F. L. Jackson and Brandon D. Daniels Part III: Social Influences 7. Securing the Ties That Bind: Community Involvement and the Educational Success of African American Children and Youth Mavis G. Sanders and Tamitha F. Campbell 8. How African American Families Can Facilitate the Academic Achievement of Their Children: Implications for Family-Based Interventions Jelani Mandara and Carolyn B. Murray  9. Addressing the Achievement Gap in Education with the Use of Technology: A Proposed Solution for African American Students Jeffrey G. Sumrall and Ramona Pittman Conclusion: Reconceptualizing the African American Pipeline: New Perspectives from a Systematic Analysis Jerlando F. L. Jackson About the Contributors Index
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Affiche du document Breaking into the All-Male Club

Breaking into the All-Male Club

Sheila

2h42min45

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
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217 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h43min.
Women professors of educational administration share their personal stories of being female firsts.Women professors of educational administration share their personal stories of being female firsts.Winner of the 2011 Critics' Choice Award presented by the American Educational Studies Association These are the inspiring and illuminating stories of women professors who first broke into the exclusive, all-male academic club of educational administration. Women of this pioneering generation tell how they overcame daunting challenges, traumas, the naiveté of others, sexual harassment, and retaliation, as well as how they encountered unexpected kindness and support along the way. Their difficult paths, complex choices, and triumphs are revealed through the experiences of the first black woman professor in educational administration, a fight to the death for tenure, a genteel southerner's confrontation with the aloof North, and a brash northerner's survival of the cultural complexities of the South. These stories speak not simply to women, but to all trailblazers in the workplace, and to those still facing discrimination and relegated to outsider status.Preface 1. Framing the Stories Norma T. Mertz 2. A First Woman with Clout Edith A. Rusch and Barbara L. Jackson 3.Breaking Through Martha McCarthy 4. Nothing Except a Battle Lost Can Be Half So Melancholy as a Battle Won: A Fight for Tenure Carolyn J. Wood 5. Traversing the Fault Line Ellen V. Bueschel about Nelda Cambron-McCabe 6. Where the Boys Were... With Apologies to Connie Francis Norma T. Mertz 7. Goodness of Fit Diana G. Pounder 8. First Ladies in the Academy Deborah A. Verstegen 9. From School Administrator to University Professor Betty Malen 10. The "Accidental" Professor Nona A. Prestine 11. Resistance and Determination: Faculty Experiences of a Women Religious Patricia A. Bauch, O.P. 12. From the Bush to the Ivory Tower Mary Gardiner 13. One Woman’s Struggle to Include and Be Included Carolyn M. Keeler 14. Being First: Stories of Social Complexities Paula Myrick Short 15. My Life as a Trophy Edith A. Rusch 16. Making Meaning of the Stories Norma T. Mertz Unfinished, Uncertain Chronology of Women’s Entry into theAll-Male Educational Administration Professoriate Contributors
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Affiche du document Race and Epistemologies of Ignorance

Race and Epistemologies of Ignorance

Sheila

3h33min00

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
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284 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h33min.
Leading scholars explore how different forms of ignorance are produced and sustained, and the role they play in knowledge practices.Leading scholars explore how different forms of ignorance are produced and sustained, and the role they play in knowledge practices.Offering a wide variety of philosophical approaches to the neglected philosophical problem of ignorance, this groundbreaking collection builds on Charles Mills's claim that racism involves an inverted epistemology, an epistemology of ignorance. Contributors explore how different forms of ignorance linked to race are produced and sustained and what role they play in promoting racism and white privilege. They argue that the ignorance that underpins racism is not a simple gap in knowledge, the accidental result of an epistemological oversight. In the case of racial oppression, ignorance often is actively produced for purposes of domination and exploitation. But as these essays demonstrate, ignorance is not simply a tool of oppression wielded by the powerful. It can also be a strategy for survival, an important tool for people of color to wield against white privilege and white supremacy. The book concludes that understanding ignorance and the politics of such ignorance should be a key element of epistemological and social/political analyses, for it has the potential to reveal the role of power in the construction of what is known and provide a lens for the political values at work in knowledge practices.Introduction Shannon Sullivan and Nancy Tuana Part I: Theorizing Ignorance 1. White Ignorance Charles W. Mills 2. Epistemologies of Ignorance: Three Types Linda Martín Alcoff 3. Ever Not Quite: Unfinished Theories, Unfinished Societies, and Pragmatism Harvey Cormier 4. Strategic Ignorance Alison Bailey 5. Denying Relationality: Epistemology and Ethics and Ignorance Sarah Lucia Hoagland 6. Managing Ignorance Elizabeth V. Spelman Part II: Situating Ignorance 7. Race Problems, Unknown Publics, Paralysis, and Faith Paul C. Taylor 8. White Ignorance and Colonial Oppression: Or, Why I Know So Little about Puerto Rico Shannon Sullivan 9. John Dewey, W. E. B. Du Bois, and Alain Locke: A Case Study in White Ignorance and Intellectual Segregation Frank Margonis 10. Social Ordering and the Systematic Production of Ignorance Lucius T. Outlaw (Jr.) 11. The Power of Ignorance Lorraine Code 12. On Needing Not to Know and Forgetting What One Never Knew: The Epistemology of Ignorance in Fanon’s Critique of Sartre Robert Bernasconi 13. On the Absence of Biology in Philosophical Considerations of Race Stephanie Malia Fullerton List of Contributors Index
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Affiche du document African Americans and Community Engagement in Higher Education

African Americans and Community Engagement in Higher Education

Sheila

3h36min45

  • Divers
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289 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h37min.
Looks at town-gown relationships with a focus on African Americans.Looks at town-gown relationships with a focus on African Americans.This book discusses race and its roles in university-community partnerships. The contributors take a collaborative, interdisciplinary, and multiregional approach that allows students, agency staff, community constituents, faculty, and campus administrators an opportunity to reflect on and redefine what impact African American identity-in the academy and in the community-has on various forms of community engagement. From historic concepts of "race uplift" to contemporary debates about racialized perceptions of need, they argue that African American identity plays a significant role. In representing best practices, recommendations, personal insight, and informed warnings about building sustainable and mutually beneficial relationships, the contributors provide a cogent platform from which to encourage the difficult and much-needed inclusion of race in dialogues of national service and community engagement.List of Tables Preface: Using History, Experience, and Theory to Balance Relationships in Community Engagement Stephanie Y. Evans Acknowledgments Introduction: Characteristics of Engagement: Communicated Experiences of Race, Universities, and Communities Colette M. Taylor Part 1. Community Service, Volunteerism, and Engagement Stephanie Y. Evans, Colette M. Taylor, Michelle R. Dunlap, and DeMond S. Miller 1. The Community Folk Art Center: A University and Community Creative Collaboration Kheli R. Willetts 2. An African American Health Care Experience: An Academic Medical Center and Its Interdisciplinary Practice Kendall M. Campbell 3. African American College Students and Volunteerism: Attitudes toward Mentoring at a Title I School Joi Nathan 4. Prejudice, Pitfalls, and Promise: Experiences in Community Service in a Historically Black University Jeff Brooks Part 2. Community Service-Learning Michelle R. Dunlap 5. Can the Village Educate the Prospective Teacher?: Reflections on Multicultural Service-Learning in African American Communities Lucy Mule 6. Sowing Seeds of Success: Gardening as a Method of Increasing Academic Self-Efficacy and Retention among African American Students August Hoffman, Julie Wallach, Eduardo Sanchez, and Richard Carifo 7. A Service or a Commitment?: A Black Man Teaching Service-Learning at a Predominantly White Institution Troy Harden 8. Racial Identity and the Ethics of Service-Learning as Pedagogy Annemarie Vaccaro 9. "We'll Understand It Better By and By": A Three-Dimensional Approach to Teaching Race through Community Engagement Meta Mendel-Reyes and Dwayne A. Mack Part 3. Community-Based Research DeMond S. Miller 10. Black Like Me: Navigating Race, Gender, Research, and Community Fleda Mask Jackson 11. A Partnership with the African American Church: IMPPACT and S.P.I.C.E.S. For Life Micah McCreary, Monica Jones, Raymond Tademy, and John Fife 12. "I Have Three Strikes Against Me": Narratives of Plight and Efficacy among Older African American Homeless Women and Their Implications for Engaged Inquiry Olivia G. M. Washington and David P. Moxley 13. A Culturally Competent Community-Based Research Approach with African American Neighborhoods: Critical Components and Examples Richard Briscoe, Harold R. Keller, Gwen McClain, Evangeline R. Best, and Jessica Mazza 14. Community Engagement and Collaborations in Community-Based Research: The Road to Project Butterfly GiShawn Mance, Bernadette Sánchez, and Niambi Jaha-Echols Final Word: African Americans and Community Engagement: A Challenge and Opportunity for Higher Education Donald F. Blake List of Contributors Index
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Affiche du document Psychoanalysis, Aesthetics, and Politics in the Work of Julia Kristeva

Psychoanalysis, Aesthetics, and Politics in the Work of Julia Kristeva

Sheila

3h18min45

  • Etudes littéraires
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265 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h19min.
Considers the social and political significance of Kristeva's oeuvre.Considers the social and political significance of Kristeva's oeuvre.The social and political relevance of Julia Kristeva's work is perhaps the central question in Kristeva studies, and the essays in this collection provide a sustained interrogation of this complicated problematic from a variety of perspectives and across the various contexts and moments of Kristeva's forty-year writing career. Presenting Kristeva's thought as the sustained interrogation of a political problematic, the contributors argue that her use of psychoanalysis and aesthetics offers significant insight into social and political issues that would otherwise remain concealed. The collection addresses the entirety of Kristeva's oeuvre, from her earliest work on poetic language to her most recent work on female genius, and it includes two previously untranslated essays by Kristeva, as well as original contributions from scholars working in several countries and a variety of disciplines.Acknowledgments Introduction:Politics from ‘a bit of a distance’ S. K. Keltner Part I. Two Statements by Kristeva 1. A Meditation, a Political Act, an Art of Living Julia Kristeva, translated by S. K. Keltner 2. Decollations Julia Kristeva, translated by Caroline Arruda Part II. The Violence of the Spectacle 3. Meaning against Death Kelly Oliver 4. Kristeva’s Intimate Revolt and the Thought Specular: Encountering the (Mulholland) Drive Frances L. Restuccia 5. Julia Kristeva and the Trajectory of the Image John Lechte 6. The Darkroom of the Soul Robyn Ferrell 7. Julia Kristeva’s Chiasmatic Journeys:From Byzantium to the Phantom of Europe and the End of the World Maria Margaroni Part III. Intimacy and the Loss of Politics 8. Love’s Lost Labors:Subjectivity, Art, and Politics Sara Beardsworth 9. Symptomatic Reading:Kristeva on Duras Lisa Walsh 10. What Is Intimacy? S. K. Keltner 11. Fear of Intimacy? Psychoanalysis and the Resistance to Commodification Cecilia Sjöholm 12. Humanism, the Rights of Man, and the Nation-State Emily Zakin 13. Kristeva’s Uncanny Revolution:Imagining the Meaning of Politics Jeff Edmonds 14. Religion and the "Rights of Man" in Julia Kristeva’s Work Idit Alphandar Contributors Index
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Affiche du document New Morning

New Morning

Sheila

2h57min00

  • Philosophie
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236 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h57min.
Essays and poems explore the contemporary relevance of Emerson's work and thought.Essays and poems explore the contemporary relevance of Emerson's work and thought.New Morning brings together philosophers, poets, and literary critics to celebrate and engage the ideas of the great American writer and philosopher, Ralph Waldo Emerson. Emerson's legacy influences many areas; he was a champion of democracy and civil rights, a naturalist, an idealist, an artist, a writer, and a philosopher. Rather than focusing on Emerson in his historical context, this volume brings to light the ways in which Emerson's voice and work still speak powerfully to the concerns of the present moment. In short essays and poems, some of America's most influential scholars and poets-including John J. McDermott, Mary Oliver, Mark Strand, Robert C. Pollock, Gary Snyder, and Lawrence Buell-underscore the relevance of Emerson's thought to contemporary issues as varied as the environment, race, politics, spirituality, aesthetics, and education.Forever Young: A Preface Michael Brodrick Acknowledgments Dancing with Emerson Deborah Digges 1. Emerson: An Introduction Mary Oliver 2. The Single Vision Robert C. Pollock Windfall William Heyen 3. Spires of Influence John J. McDermott 4. Teaching for Lustres: An Essay on the Emersonian Teacher Arthur S. Lothstein The Continental College of Beauty Mark Strand 5. Emerson at The Gates David LaRocca 6. Taking Emerson Personally John Lysaker Local Knowledge Paul Hoover 7. Face to Face with Emerson David Marr 8. Emerson’s Natures: Origins of and Possibilities for American Environmental Thought Douglas R. Anderson Shudder Dorene Evans 9. Emerson and the Reinvention of Democracy: A Lesson for the Twenty-first Century Len Gougeon 10. Individualism, Natural Law, Human Rights: Emerson on "The Scholar" vis-à-vis Emerson on Reform Lawrence Buell For the Children Gary Snyder 11. After Emerson: Of General Knowledge and the Common Good Ann Lauterbach Letter to Lucia Ralph Waldo Emerson Contributors Index
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Affiche du document Little Darlin' (A 2021 Fred Falke Mix)

Little Darlin' (A 2021 Fred Falke Mix)

Sheila

  • Variété française
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Affiche du document Little Darlin'

Little Darlin'

Sheila

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Affiche du document Little Darlin' (2021 Fred Falke Remix)

Little Darlin' (2021 Fred Falke Remix)

Sheila

  • Variété française
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