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Academic literature on the topic 'Écoles arméniennes'
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Journal articles on the topic "Écoles arméniennes"
Lenoir-achdjian, Annick. "L'évolution de l'identité arménienne à Montréal. Les relations entre les parents et les écoles arméniennes." Hommes et Migrations 1265, no. 1 (2007): 82–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/homig.2007.4568.
Full textGauthier, Jean-Sébastien. "L’accueil dans les écoles de Valence des enfants des premiers réfugiés arméniens (1923-1936)1." Documents pour l'histoire du français langue étrangère ou seconde, no. 46 (January 1, 2011): 73–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/dhfles.2126.
Full textJoseph, John E. "Structure, mentalité, société, civilisation : les quatre linguistiques d’Antoine Meillet." SHS Web of Conferences 78 (2020): 15002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20207815002.
Full textChown, Jennifer Rodney, and David Chown. "The Humanitarian Work of the Near East Relief during the Armenian Genocide and the Contribution of Nova Scotia Nurse Sara Corning." Canadian Ethnic Studies 55, no. 3 (2023): 163–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ces.2023.a928889.
Full textSercia, Pierre. "L’aptitude au français1 d’élèves fréquentant des écoles ethnoreligieuses au Québec." 7, no. 2 (March 28, 2008): 43–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/017817ar.
Full textDeirdre, Meintel. "Ethnicité." Anthropen, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.17184/eac.anthropen.095.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Écoles arméniennes"
Gavrilof, Elodie. "Après l'Empire, une école à (re)construire pour les nationalités : les écoles arméniennes en Turquie et en Arménie soviétique (1919 - 1939)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris, EHESS, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024EHES0173.
Full textAt the intersection of Armenian, Turkish, and Soviet studies, this dissertation aims to use Armenians as a case study for a comparative history of educational systems in Turkey and Soviet Armenia during the interwar period.Originally tasked with training the elites, educational systems were assigned new roles as national movements emerged: to educate the masses in the idea of the nation. The explosion of violence in the region—wars, as well as the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire—shattered Armenian educational systems, which had previously been known for their efficiency.The new states that arose from the former empires attempted to implement various educational projects aimed at constructing a new society. Initially, Armenian schools enjoyed greater leeway due to the weakening of traditional actors in the region as a result of war and political instability. However, as these new states sought international recognition, they gradually took over and (re)constructed educational systems in their own image. After a flurry of reforms in the 1920s, the 1930s became a period of consolidation, and by the eve of World War II, both Turkey and Soviet Armenia had functional educational systems in place.Nevertheless, these reforms provoked various reactions from Armenians, who, although left with no choice but to adapt to the sometimes brutal changes, managed to preserve certain specificities, which differed on either side of the Arax River, the border between Turkey and the Soviet Union.Through a heuristic perspective and using a transdisciplinary approach, this dissertation seeks to address the questions raised by the very existence of Armenian educational systems after the collapse of the empires and within the new states, comparing minority and nationality policies, as well as examining issues of identity, citizenship, and the transmission of cultural heritage across generations
Papikyan, Hayarpi. "L'éducation aux confins de l'Empire : la scolarisation des filles et l'entrée des femmes arméniennes dans l'espace public au Caucase : (milieu du XIXe - début XXe siècle)." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017USPCB219.
Full textThis dissertation brings to the light the story of the late-mid-nineteenth century and early twentieth-century education of Armenian girls for the first time by placing it in the context of the general political events that influenced its development. It also examines Armenian women's work as educators, organisers and sponsors of girls' schooling. The research is based on a wide array of public and private sources: school reports, programs and regulations, press publications (editorials, correspondences, news, announcements and advertisements), literary works, speeches, memoirs, diaries, autobiographies and letters, which reveal the period's progression from girls receiving private tutoring and an archaic training by deaconesses and celibate devotees to establishing regular schools for girls and providing them a similar form of education as their brothers. The development of Armenian girls' schools and education took place in the turbulent context of the repressive colonial politics of the Russian Government in the Caucasus, the efforts of the Armenian Church to maintain its authority and power over the Armenian communities and the growing Armenian national-revolutionary movement. The research uncovers the nuances of changing consciousness about Armenian girls' education and shows how it led Armenian women to assume public roles, establish schools, charities, libraries, write and translate children's literature, undertake a wide range of fund-raising public activities for girls' schools (charity bazaars, public lotteries, embroidery sales, theatres and concerts) and enter the revolutionary movement. This dissertation joins a vibrant conversation in the educational sciences about nineteenth and early twentieth-century schooling, programs and institutions. It also engages in the discussions about Eastern-European and Caucasian girls' education and women's history. The research also contributes to Armenian Studies by restoring to Armenian history a missing and vital chapter about women's presence and role in the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century major political, social and cultural developments
Leyloyan-Yekmalyan, Anna. "L' école miniaturiste du Vaspurakan : style, iconographie, familles des copistes et des peintres (XIVe-XVIIe s.)." Paris, EPHE, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003EPHE4038.
Full textGauthier, Jean-Sébastien. "Parcours migratoires et scolaires d'enfants arméniens à Valence durant l'entre-deux-guerres." Thesis, Lyon, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LYSE2178/document.
Full textLaunched on the exile roads, after the 1915 genocide caused by the Jeune-Turc government, the Armenian refugees were in search of a territory open to welcome them. After an exodus which lasted several years and led them into the Balkan States and the whole Near East, some of them made the choice of France. The first refugees turned up in Valence in 1922 or 1923 (itdepends on the pieces of information). Others followed a few years later. My study attempts to show the Armenian families and children’s geographical routes, from their places of origin to Valence. Several more or less varied waves of immigrants occurred. Very often, the trip from Marseille to the “Cité drômoise” was not straight. The different stages of their French itinerary appear as markers of their varied social and economic conditions before their arrival in Valence. My contribution will also attempt to show the different school careers they made in French schools. As soon as the first arrived, children were sent to primary school and had varied school careers, even if labor remained a priority at the end of their compulsory education. The school careers in the two main educational profiles- socially unequal- were not simple and many pupils had difficulties in completing their primary or secondary schooling. The French school welcomed these foreign pupils and the acquisition of the French language was the most important issue. Other pupils had outstanding courses. Affected by the local socio-economic circumstances, the Armenian families made choices for their children. For some of them, school had to promote the learning of a trade, as skilled labourers, technicians or office workers. Others expected their children to continue the family business. Compulsory schooling promoted the acquisition of the French language but also increased the qualification levels. The Armenians wanted a future for their children and resigned themselves to the choices of their parents. After their teenage years, their professions changed and the families’ destinies advanced with new career opportunities