Academic literature on the topic 'Mythe et modernité'
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Journal articles on the topic "Mythe et modernité"
Decap, Roger. "Mythe et modernité : The Unicorn d'Iris Murdoch." Caliban 27, no. 1 (1990): 83–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/calib.1990.1241.
Full textMerello, Ida. "Myriam Robic, Hellénismes de Banville: mythe et modernité." Studi Francesi, no. 162 (LIV | III) (November 1, 2010): 573. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/studifrancesi.6365.
Full textDekens, Julie. "Réécrire l’origine poétique au XXe siècle : l’expérience du Bestiaire ou cortège d’Orphée de Guillaume Apollinaire." Études littéraires 42, no. 1 (December 22, 2011): 37–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1007157ar.
Full textBerdoulay, Vincent, Iná Castro, and Paulo C. Da Costa Gomès. "L’espace public entre mythe, imaginaire et culture." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 45, no. 126 (April 12, 2005): 413–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/023001ar.
Full textBoudreau, Raoul. "La création de Moncton comme « capitale culturelle » dans l’oeuvre de Gérald Leblanc." Revue de l'Université de Moncton 38, no. 1 (July 9, 2008): 33–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/018403ar.
Full textNgalamulume, Kalala. "Mythe, Politique et Histoire: Le Mythe De Mande Katawa Chez Les “Luluwa” Du Kasayi." History in Africa 22 (January 1995): 329–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3171920.
Full textAntier, Guilhen. "Luther et Lacan." Articles spéciaux 73, no. 2 (December 14, 2017): 141–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1042442ar.
Full textPellegrino, Pierre. "L'architecture, tradition et modernité : le mythe de la montagne perdue / Architecture, tradition and modernity : the myth of the disappearing mountain landscape." Revue de géographie alpine 84, no. 3 (1996): 109–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rga.1996.3874.
Full textCampeau, Sylvain. "La BJ/NBJ : du laboratoire des signes au dandysme des sens." Études 17, no. 2 (August 30, 2006): 264–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/200961ar.
Full textMercier, Andrée. "S’HABILLER EN COSTUMES D’ÉPOQUE." Dossier 44, no. 2 (May 8, 2019): 13–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1059512ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Mythe et modernité"
Dirschauer, Stéphane. "Mythe et modernité dans l'anthropologie philosophique de Hans Blumenberg." Thèse, Paris 4, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/16497.
Full textChevrier, Jacques. "Williams Sassine, un écrivain africain au carrefour du mythe et de la modernité." Paris 12, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992PA120008.
Full textThe novels of williams sassine provide a sociological, political, economical and cultural analysis of african societies which appear deeply affected and striken by what the novelist regards as an "historical wreckage". The heroes of these novels are therefore involved in a quest of the past - beyond islamism and christianis - in order to fond again their true identity. Williams sassine suggests that, if they want to return to the magical country of the origins, they have to undergo a series of sufferings, so that most of the main characters are christ'like figures. Biblical influence is evident through saint monsieur baly and wirriyamu, but the writer never forgets he is a son of kankan, his birthplace in the mande, so that elements of african mythological tales are also an important part of his writing
Bordry, Marguerite-Marie. "Venises mineures. Le mythe à l’épreuve de la modernité (Boito, Castelnuovo, Gallina, Rovetta)." Thesis, Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040189.
Full textThis doctoral thesis provides an analysis of the image of Venice in the works of four writers, either born in Venice or strongly attached to the city, between 1866 and World War One, a time when Venice featured prominently in European literature. After having analysed the limited fame of Venetian writers in a literary context focusing on masterpieces which were mainly the results of their writers’ travels to Venice, this works analyses the Venetian works of Camillo Boito (1836-1914), Enrico Castelnuovo (1839-1915), Giacinto Gallina (1852-1897) and Gerolamo Rovetta (1851-1910) and focuses on the question of minor literature. The first part provides a series of benchmarks. It studies the possibility of a Venetian literary myth and details the economic and political history of Venice at the time. It also focuses on the challenges of minor literature when related to cultural history. The four chapters of the second part analyse the four writers’ works, emphasizing the way they deal with the Venetian stereotypes of the time. The third part draws some conclusions: Boito, Castelnuovo, Rovetta and Gallina distance themselves from the Venetian literary myth and their works show the deep changes that affected the Venetian society at the time. It offers the hypothesis that their works may have remained unknown because they didn’t dwell on the Venetian singularity. At the same time, they enable their readers to discover a modern Venice, an aspect rarely taken into consideration in the studies dedicated to Nineteenth Century literary Venice
Engélibert, Jean-Paul. "Mythe littéraire et modernité : les réécritures de Robinson Crusoé dans les littératures française et anglaise, 1954-1986." Phd thesis, Université de la Réunion, 1996. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00646138.
Full textKim, Ju-Young. "L'objet ancien dans sa forme et son essence : entre passé et modernité, familiarité et étrangeté." Thesis, Paris 1, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA01H322.
Full textAn ancient object that is no longer in use today continues however to survive in our contemporary life. It is presented to us with another function and often with another definition: it is no longer the useful object nor the practical tool that it used to be. In this dissertation, the value of the ancient object is studied in its immaterial and spiritual dimensions. We will thus renew its definition by reflecting on its essence and form from a contemporary viewpoint. The first part of the dissertation presents the concepts around the value of the ancient object in our time from a sociological angle. Next, we propose an approach to the concept of the ancient object as half-human and half-object. Since an ancient object from another era always keeps within itself its life in the period gone by, could this object exist as if it were an animated entity? In the second part, we have sought what characteristics could offer the ancient object this sensation of human life. Perhaps, first of all, the traces of people that it has accumulated visibly and invisibly? The Korean notion of “sonté” allows us to translate and express these visible and invisible traces on the ancient object. In the last part, the ancient object is studied in the field of contemporary art. Contemporary artists see the ancient object as a new object and give it another form and another essence which often is an allegory of human destiny
Coste, Grégory. "Le sujet à l'épreuve de la modernité : image, mythe et politique dans le roman d'avant-garde espagnol (1926-1934)." Thesis, Reims, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017REIML001.
Full textThe Spanish Avant-Garde Novel has long suffered from an ongoing disrepute because of the dehumanizing prejudice to which it was systematically associated. This work intends to show that far from being neglectful of man, the avant-garde novel is haunted by the expression, representation and writing of the individual subject, considered here as a plural reality - both novelistic and actantial, metaphysical and existential, moral and political – interconnected with the world. To reflect the novelistic expression of the Avant-Garde, with close textual reading, I have decided to combine a thematic approach, dealing with the individual subject facing modernity, with a diachronic perspective that takes account of modulations and variations in time and of the authors’ individual perspectives. The first two parts reassess Image and Myth, long implicated as factors of derealization and dehumanization, to reveal a process of subjectivization of the world through images and humanization of myths by their fertile rewriting. First considered as an « examining subject » through the displaying of images, then as an « examined subject » through myths, man is finally thought as an « acting subject » in the third part of this work which endeavours to report on and assess the last historical developments of the Avant-Garde, at the turning point of rehumanization in the early 1930s
Girault, Mathilde. "Professionnalités de l’urbain et crises écologiques : politiser l’urbanisme et ses métiers par la reconnaissance de leur constellation mythologique." Thesis, Lyon, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019LYSE2046.
Full textEnvironmental uncertainties, democratic doubts as well as economic and social complexities would challenge the urban planning's mastery, planning and predictability ambitions. Practitioners would increasingly feel inadequacy of urban planning's knowledge to take theses evolutions into account. They therefore start to renew their profession's knowledge by invoking other categories of expertise (disciplinary, relational, cooperative, experiential, etc.) based on subjective relevance criteria. This diversifying, even merging, profession's knowledge capability is called professionality.Nevertheless, theses professionalities are slowed down in achieving their tasks due to urban planning compliance to the Modernity politic plan. Thus, using the knowledge improvement as a collective emancipation, the Modernity only admits logico-formal rationality as a democratic selection criterion. It rejects any political arbitration based on affection, sensitivity, believes, axiology, etc. When Modernity is faced with theses arbitrations, it makes use of mythological patterns of thinking because the timeless, universal, structuring, and familiar impact of the myth allows to easily get a commitment. Environmental crisis revive uncertainties and rejected topics, thus unveiling a urban planning's mythological constellation through Prometheus, Babel and Orpheus myths. The knowledge of urban planning's myths is absolutely necessary for professionalities as they define fora for expression avoiding the Modernity reproductive power
Balderas-Laignelet, Christelle. "La poésie comme sublimation du vécu. Pour une étude de l'œuvre de Sandro Penna." Thesis, Montpellier 3, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010MON30051.
Full textThis thesis deals with the work of the Italian poet Sandro Penna and intends to be a critical and chronological reading and analysis. Penna stands apart from the poetical movements of his time; therefore most of his poems and prose narration works are very short and present a timeless view of Life mainly focused on love for young men (from 13 to 16 y.o). From his very first writings this topic is recurrent and obsessional. This is the reason why it is difficult to establish his work as “an autobiographical novel in verse”. Consequently the collections Poesie, Confuso sogno, Peccato di gola. (Poesie al fermo posta) and Un po’ di febbre are analysed in order to relate the uncommon Penna’s personal path and to confirm that love for young men expresses a more universal love for Life. In this “out of time” life an echo of voices of his coevals, such as Saba, Montale, Ungaretti and Pasolini and of his predecessors like Leopardi and Pascoli can be heard. Two aims appear in the poetical and existential quest by Penna: - restoring a harmonious dialog with the Beginning (which is considered as the myth of the original childhood from which memories are immediately absorbed by the spleen of Modernity); - seeing human life as an infinite cycle. From this viewpoint, Platon and Nietzsche’s works, which were well known by Penna, allow us to go further into this questioning through which the poet succeeds in sublimating Real Life
Mele, Ilenia. "Les cendres de Pascoli. Voix de la critique et modernité du poète de Barga." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017USPCA133.
Full textThe title of this thesis refers, explicitly, to the famous Pier Paolo Pasolini’s collection, The ashes of Gramsci. Pascoli’s influence on Pasolini explains only in part the title of the thesis. The ashes of Pascoli refers more specifically to the reception of the poet of San Mauro, together with a special attention to the effects on his work. According to this point of view, the continuity of Pascolian criticism has played a central role: from the end of the nineteenth century until the sixties of the twentieth century. It was at the end of this journey that it became clear to us that the different voices of criticism ended up interacting with each other, composing a network and giving a living image of Pascoli and his work to the reader. Gianfranco Contini and Pier Paolo Pasolini could not have marked a turning point in the reception of Pascoli’s work if he had not received the criticisms from Emilio Cecchi, Arturo Onofri or Renato Serra at the beginning of the 20th century. In their studies the image of Pascoli clearly emerges as poet of modernity, an aspect that Jean-Charles Vegliante still reaffirms today, highlighting as the poetry of Pascoli has continued to act on the national literature, for example on Montale of the Ossi, and beyond. And this in spite of the discredit that the Benedetto Croce's criticisms have cast on the work of the Pascoli to the point of considering him as the “ poeta delle maestrine”.The continuity of the criticism has also allowed us to grasp the importance of the historical context in the literary reception. Alongside the diachronic study, we have developed a work on two of the most emblematic poems of Pascoli – Italy (fifth chapter) and Gog and Magog (eighth chapter) – in order to understand the ideologies underlying the different approaches we have tried to reconstitute. This choice was not insignificant. These two poems, at the heart of the mythopoetic work of Pascoli, have divided critics. Nowadays Pascoli, whose poetic qualities make it possible to go back to Dante and Petrarch, represents one of the major Italian poets that it would be really significant to make him known in France
Rosny, Antoine de. "La culture classique d'André Suarès." Thesis, Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040084.
Full textThis thesis explores the presence of Antiquity in the work of André Suarès and questions the meaning of a literary creation which was profoundly marked by the Graeco-Roman legacy. Suarès’s poetry and drama were dominated by the great figures of history and by Greek myths. In the first part of his career, he took them up compulsively, but he soon faced the deadlock of literary superactivity which is an enemy of literary creation. With maturity, he came to master antique inspiration and to invent forms which were more open to modernity. Suarès’s classical culture also bloomed in his critical texts. In his portraits, Suarès celebrated the great figures of the past ; in his chronicles and essays, and in his books of fragmentary thoughts, he questioned his identity through mythological doubles, meditated on love and woman, and on the complex relationships between Antiquity and Modernity ; in his combat texts, he expressed his antigermanism through the concepts of Latinity and Romanity. Classical culture is omnipresent, many-sided and it can’t be ignored. It did inspire and feed the whole work of the author. Driven on by the desire to be the universal genius of Modernity, Suarès sought the formula of the classical creator in the conciliation of the Ancient and Christian heritage. He understood that imitating the Ancients only led to the creation of dead works : life would only spring thanks to the personal and original appropriation of a heritage enriched by the Christian genius. Though he did not really manage to embody the poetical and drama greatness he dreamt of for himself, Suarès has won fame in his tireless commentary of universal creation
Books on the topic "Mythe et modernité"
Nze-Nguema, Fidèle-Pierre. Modernité, tiers-mythe et bouc-hémisphère. Paris: Publisud, 1989.
Find full textRobic, Myriam. Hellénismes de Banville: Mythe et modernité. Paris: Champion, 2010.
Find full textMassonnaud, Dominique. Courbet scandale: Mythe de la rupture et modernité. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2003.
Find full textLe mythe Deneuve: Une "star" française entre classicisme et modernité. [Paris]: Nouveau monde, 2010.
Find full textJules Verne, mythe et modernité. Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 1989.
Find full textNze₋Nguema, Fidèle₋Pierre. Modernité, tiers₋mythe et bouc₋hemisphère. Paris: Publisud, 1990.
Find full textColloque "Lovecraft et ses contemporains" (1995 Centre culturel international, Cerisy-la-Salle, France). H.P. Lovecraft: Fantastique, mythe et modernité. Paris: Editions Dervy, 2002.
Find full textCourbet scandale: Mythes de la rupture et modernité. Paris: Harmattan, 2003.
Find full textDixon, Paul B. Retired dreams: Dom Casmurro, myth and modernity. West Lafayette, Ind: Purdue University Press, 1989.
Find full textNoacco, Cristina. La mythologie de l'Antiquité et la modernité: Appropriation, adaptation, détournement. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Mythe et modernité"
Dallet-mann, Véronique. "Le mythe de Marseille entre Modernité, exotisme et couleur locale." In Marseille. Éclat(s) du mythe, 209–23. Presses universitaires de Provence, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pup.23197.
Full textBahuet Gachet, Delphine. "Entre mythe et modernité : le Milan de Dino Buzzati." In L’esprit des lieux, 459–79. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.23308.
Full textRipoll, François. "Chapitre VI. Mythe et tragédie dans la Pharsale de Lucain." In La mythologie de l'Antiquité à la modernité, 85–98. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.39592.
Full textDethurens, Pascal. "Chapitre IV. Le songe d’une après-midi de printemps ou Vers la fin du mythe européen ?" In Claudel et l’avènement de la modernité, 267–339. Presses universitaires de Franche-Comté, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pufc.3739.
Full textMora, Francine. "Chapitre X. Le mythe des géants et la « renaissance » du XIIe siècle." In La mythologie de l'Antiquité à la modernité, 143–55. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.39602.
Full textZambon, Francesco. "Chapitre XXVII. Le mythe du Graal chez Jean Cocteau et Julien Gracq." In La mythologie de l'Antiquité à la modernité, 371–82. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.39637.
Full textCampangne, Hervé-Thomas. "Chapitre XVIII. Métamorphose et réécriture du mythe dans le Cinquiesme tome des histoires tragiques de François de Belleforest." In La mythologie de l'Antiquité à la modernité, 249–63. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.39616.
Full textBruhat, Marie-Odile. "Chapitre VII. Formes et enjeux de la critique du mythe dans la pensée des auteurs chrétiens du IIe siècle." In La mythologie de l'Antiquité à la modernité, 99–111. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.39594.
Full textWillard, Claude. "La Commune de Paris de 1871 : mythes et réalités." In La commune de 1871 : utopie ou modernité ?, 15–19. Presses universitaires de Perpignan, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pupvd.36640.
Full textDouville, Olivier. "Des constructions infantiles aux mythes pubertaires : champ social et modernités." In De l'infantile au juvénile, 31. ERES, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eres.rassi.2006.01.0031.
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