Academic literature on the topic 'Hommes de la classe ouvrière – Dans la littérature'
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Journal articles on the topic "Hommes de la classe ouvrière – Dans la littérature":
DOFNY, Jacques. "Lutte de sexes et lutte de classes." Sociologie et sociétés 6, no. 1 (September 30, 2002): 3–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/001192ar.
Langlois, Simon. "Stratification et classes sociales à Montréal, 1991-2011." Les Cahiers des dix, no. 70 (January 26, 2017): 237–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1038749ar.
Langlois, Isabelle, and Patrizia Villotti. "Oppressions et barrières systémiques en relation d’aide pour les populations marginalisées." Canadian Journal of Career Development 21, no. 1 (February 1, 2022): 20–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.53379/cjcd.2022.227.
Rouillard, Jacques. "La fête du Travail à Montréal le premier lundi de septembre, symbole de l’affirmation de la classe ouvrière dans l’espace public (1886-1952)1." Revue d’histoire de l’Amérique française 64, no. 2 (August 12, 2013): 33–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1017838ar.
Leishman, David. "The works philosopher : contesting cultural taxonomies in contemporary Scottish literature." Recherches anglaises et nord-américaines 40, no. 1 (2007): 127–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ranam.2007.1341.
Scaramozzino, S., I. Caraby, N. Benlahcene, M. Tranape, and K. Cuvelier. "Antipsychotiques, hyperprolactinémie et qualité de vie." European Psychiatry 29, S3 (November 2014): 649. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2014.09.017.
Fleras, Augie, and Shane Michael Dixon. "Cutting, Driving, Digging, and Harvesting: Re-masculinizing the Working-Class Heroic." Canadian Journal of Communication 36, no. 4 (January 17, 2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.22230/cjc.2011v36n4a2419.
Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Hommes de la classe ouvrière – Dans la littérature":
Nasralli, Abdelhamid. "La question des identités ouvrières dans la littérature contemporaine du travail. L'exemple de Leslie Kaplan et François Bon." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Clermont Auvergne (2021-...), 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024UCFA0011.
Our work hunts for bringing together two literary thoughts of two writers who marked the return of literature to narratives, Man and the world around the 1970’s and 1980’s. The study we are leading rests on a precise problem which is the nowadays identities of workers, their construction/deconstruction but above all questioning their status in a world of massive changes. Indeed, Leslie Kaplan and François Bon whom we are studying tend to question in their respective narrative the identity of workers in terms of a permanent process of reconstitution and transformation linked to new forms of work which has become atypical. Also, through the construction of novelistic characters with uncertain and fragile identities they look for revealing the state of precariousness of the social conditions of workers in the real society. Thus, as the story unfolds, the characters-workers are confronted with a real that they cannot grasp ; a real where the workspace is dislocated and worktime is fragmented. Leslie Kaplan and François Bon leave scope to such real in their texts through discontinued and hybrid structure which is nothing but an answer to the “fracture that runs the surface of the world”. Leslie Kaplan and François Bon writing is political at its very core through making the discursive gesture (free speech) as well as physical gesture (social struggle) a medium through which the characters try to confirm a threatened identity and to regain a lost working culture
Yu, Ki-Hwan. "Deux romans ouvriers : Germinal, Le Crépuscule, dimension socio-politique d'une esthétique." Paris 8, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA081347.
This study examines how the authors, by applying their own socio-political beliefs to the working-class struggles they write about, give form to their novels. The study is composed of three parts: first, an examination of the novels' presentation of social opposition; next, an examination of how ideological indoctrination - motivated by social opposition - is presented, and finally a focus on the working-class hopes born of this ideological teaching. The first part, which treats three of the novels' bases (+character;, +time; and +space;) will show that antagonism completely dominates humans trapped in a capitalistic society: we will emphasize discursive opposition and the temporal order of the episodes. The second part is devoted to the study of the indoctrination model: we will attempt to prove that the crux of these novels of the working class is this teaching of ideology. The third part attempts to explain just how much novels of the working class emphasize the desire to fight and the optimistic belief in a positive result of that fight: if we speak of an "aesthetic of hope" in an "aesthetic of struggle", it is because this hope comes solely from the fight. Throughout this study we will attempt to show that however pertinent the questions asked by a literary work may be, an excessive schematization for its utility will result, ultimately, in a negation of that literary work. From this reasoning we arrive at the following conclusion, posed as a hypothesis: the more a novel of the working class employs artistic qualities, the more its socio-political theses succeed in being convincing
Hétu, Dominique. "Luttes et espaces habités du quotidien dans quatre récits de fiction par Gabrielle Roy, Helen Potrebenko, Isabel Vaillancourt et Heater O'Neill." Mémoire, Université de Sherbrooke, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/11143/5637.
Goégan, Pierre. "L'écriture prolétarienne dans les années 1920-1930." Rennes 2, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991REN20013.
A flourishing proletarian movement has left its mark on the French literature in the years 1920 - 1930. The purpose of this work is to underline its anti-authoritarian component. Not professional, the writers are men and women coming from the people, who thanks to a self-culture proceeding succeed to bear witness to what they know the best the humble people's life. After getting out the difference and the distance between Marxist and anti-authoritarian conception of literature, we give an account of proletarian real life but above all, we emphasize the moral valour of the proletarian writing. The praise of the daily bread, wine, work, struggle and solidarity runs through the pages of the anti-authoritarian writing, under the seal of the authenticity. It's not astonishing consequently, that a deep bitterness veil the great desire and the tremendous hope of the proletarian people, that get not satisfaction
Al, Azraki Kamel. "Le monde ouvrier dans "L'assommoir" et "Germinal" d'Emile Zola." Limoges, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992LIMO0501.
In our study, we will focus on two of zola's masterpieces, l'assommoir and germinal. This can be divided into two parts. First of all, we will analyse the working class and bourgeoisy's way of living with, on the one hand, the working conditions of men, women and children, and on the other hand, the study of the rising of the middle classes, their moral standards, their education, and their relationships with the working class. Then, we will exponent zola's political ideas -which he assigned to his characters, and his ideological evolution through his literary work. And we will also study the workmen's actions, like the general strike in his two novels we will try hard to pointout the differences between the middle and working classes, on a trade level, but also on a psychological and physical level, concerning education, housing, food and language. Theses divergences lead our study to its purpose, which is the struggle between the hero 'working class) and the anti hero (the middle class)
Farsian, Mohammad-Reza. "La représentation de la ville industrielle dans le roman du XIXème siècle." Thesis, Paris 3, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA030071.
With the emergence of the industrial revolution, country people moved to the new industrial centers. Through this movement appeared a new social class, the working class, crowding in the cities and also in the suburbs around the factories. To minimize the distance between the places of work and the residences, a lot habitations appear suddenly out of earth around industrial factories. In those areas, simple social structures were created leading to a new city shape: the industrial city whose main characteristic, before the setting of the working class, is the factory or the mine, places full of industrial items, mechanical inventions and techniques. The present research aims at introducing this industrial city as the most typical product of the nineteenth century through its technical components and its working class. The city is considered as one of the main element in the novel as far as becoming the basic and strong support of their intrigue. Without neglecting the substancial and amazing effect and the consequences of the machine in the daily life and without forgetting that the technical revolution is supported and materialized by the machine itself, the thesis analyses, through the studied novels, the role of those machines in the emergence of the industrial city as well as its effects in the daily life of the working class. The study is developed by a portrait of the working class, main users of the machines and a description of the technical and industrial incarnations in their lifes, their work and their habits. With the nineteenth century's literature and especially through the naturalist movement, this social class is for the first time analysed by considering its monotonous daily life, its little dramas, its manners and its mentality. Therefore the negative effects of the industrialization and of the mechanization on the working class appear in the literature, and some writers try to solve the problem by creating utopia
Books on the topic "Hommes de la classe ouvrière – Dans la littérature":
Bromell, Nicholas Knowles. By the sweat of the brow: Literature and labor in antebellum America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993.
Tracy, Susan Jean. In the master's eye: Representations of women, Blacks, and poor whites in antebellum Southern literature. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1995.
Devlin, Athena. Between profits and primitivism: Shaping white middle-class masculinity in the United States, 1880-1917. New York: Routledge, 2004.
Wilson, Nicola. Home in British Working-Class Fiction. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.
Wilson, Nicola. Home in British Working-Class Fiction. Taylor & Francis Group, 2015.
Wilson, Nicola. Home in British Working-Class Fiction. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.
Wilson, Nicola. Home in British Working-Class Fiction. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.
Wilson, Nicola. Home in British Working-Class Fiction. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
In the Master's Eye: Representations of Women, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Antebellum Southern Literature. University of Massachusetts Press, 1996.
Rabinowitz, Paula. Labor and Desire: Women's Revolutionary Fiction in Depression America. University of North Carolina Press, 2000.