Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Racisme – Au théâtre'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the top 24 dissertations / theses for your research on the topic 'Racisme – Au théâtre.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Browse dissertations / theses on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.
Freitas-Fernandes, Aurélien. "Le Concert Party hier et aujourd’hui en Afrique de l’ouest : une enquête de terrain (évolution histoire, question dramaturgiques, enjeux esthétiques et sociologiques)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 3, 2023. http://www.theses.fr/2023PA030030.
Full textThis thesis in Theatre Studies, accompanied by a scientific documentary film, is based on a historical and anthropological field study that aims to understand the dramaturgical and sociological issues of a genre of musical cabaret theatre called the Concert Party. From its origins during the colonial period to the present day, the Concert Party has been an extremely popular and subversive artistic movement in West Africa. Produced in the vernacular (Twi, Ewe, Mina...), associated with highlife music and relying on highly coded disguises, make-up and dramaturgy, the shows are still performed in the maquis of the large and medium-sized cities of the West African coast and derisively enjoy turning colonial and racist representations on their head while resisting cultural alienation and political powers. Born in 1930 in the Gold Coast (now Ghana), the genre was exported to its neighbouring country Togo in 1965 after independence. However, the genre's fate in these two countries was very different, without losing its subversive force. The research, which focuses on the history and mutations of the genre up to its present day, is based on research undertaken during several visits to Ghana and Togo, as well as on field experiences from the inside. It was carried out, among other things, by immersion in the Azé Kokovivina Concert Band, Togo's last great concert party company, created in 1985. This also made it possible to collect archives, testimonies and video traces in the form of a scientific report
Elthes, Agnès. "Théâtre et musique dans les tragédies de Racine." Paris, INALCO, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991INAL0009.
Full textIn the tragedies of Racine, the paraverbal elements of representation are involved in the poetic text. The elements referring to the scenic movements, to the mimic and to the setting are in a dynamic relationship with the text. At the same time, the art of Racine is inseparably connected with the music. In order to prove the existence of relations between Racine and the music, the researcher has to overcome the traditional disciplinary limits of the analyse of a literary work. By analysing the musical partition, "Idylle sur la paix" of Racine / Lully it can be regarded as an opera prologue. The phenomena having musical reference in the composition of the time are polyphony, counterpoint and variation. The most compound acoustic effect in the poetic text combining signification, phonics, rhythm and iconography, is the echo-technique. In "Berenice", being the most classical tragedy written by Racine, it is possible to demonstrate abstract and concrete relations with the music
Jeong, Jae Hoon. "Les rôles des reines dans le théâtre de Racine." Paris 3, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001PA030015.
Full textN'heri, Touhami. "La poétique des éléments dans le théâtre de Jean Racine." Thesis, Paris Est, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PEST0004.
Full textGuyot, Sylvaine. "Jean Racine et le corps tragique." Paris 3, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA030135.
Full textThe tragic body in Racinian tragedy appears to be an object of study that is both paradoxical and obvious. Obvious since theatre is par excellence an art of the body and yet paradoxical because Racinian tragedies are typically known for their de-emphasis of the body’s presence both as a point of focus and as a means of expression. This study seeks to address this neglected topic by challenging the conventional notion that classicism was fundamentally detached, harmonious and universal. To study the tragic body is to undertake a cultural history since the body is a social fact whose practices, values and representations are determined by the society of which it is a part. At the crossroads of a number of areas – politics, moral and scientific anthropology, elite civility, oratory arts and aesthetic trends – the Racinian body puts into play the fundamental values of seventeenth-century society. Far from being a simple reflection of reality, Racinian tragedy is a space of conflict that probes the very foundations of social imagery, in that it dramatizes the fissures inherent in institutions. Tragedy during the reign of Louis XIV serves as a fruitful avenue of inquiry. It is contemporaneous with absolutism and thereby amply imbued with power. Of Aristotlean inspiration, it also draws upon the polemical relationship between dignity and weakness in order to call forth intense emotions. And with the emergence of the field of literature, tragedy is above all concerned with pleasing. Dramatist in this gallant century, Racine explores the forms of the body to the extent of touching his audiences. His analysis allows one equally to observe the transformations in the theatrical aesthetic. Cultural, critical and aesthetic bodies : the physical body in Racine’s tragedies offers a point of entry to examine the history of the theater, of manners, of taste and of emotions
Lacroix, Philippe. "Le théâtre tragique de Racine au regard de son temps et de l'histoire." Paris 12, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1989PA120020.
Full textRacine transforms tragedy: he is the champion of a courteous new hirth and the creator of a mystic. Ancients son, racine is so author of an audacious and refined political, explained by sacred tragedies. This idea, always ignored or learnedly transformed by the critic, has no equivalent in the tragic theatre of seventeenth century
Stephan, Hayek Christelle. "Linguistique et rhétorique du monologue dans le théâtre racinien." Paris 3, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA030042.
Full textWe have approached the particular form of language which is the monologue, to concentrate our interest on the place occupied by this form in Racine’s plays. As the analysis progressed, the monologue, that was intuitively defined as a speech held by a character to itself, became an inexhaustible mine of linguistic, pragmatic and rhetorical richness. However, the best way to analyze a linguistic form is to focus on the language that constitutes its framework, as well as on the components that turn it into a form of speech. We have tried, in the first part, to define the monologue starting from the lexicological and etymological definitions and ending up with a dramaturgical characterization of this particular form of theatrical speech; the second chapter has been exclusively dedicated to various aspects of the Racine’s monologues. In the third chapter, we have established a comparison between our corpus and the Cornelian monologues. Then, in the second part, we have only been interested in the Racine’s monologues, throughout a narrow linguistic analysis of the thirty monologs contained in his plays, revealing one by one, each of the ruling metric, syntactic and lexical mechanisms, and exploring the specificities of the communication in this so particular form of speech. The third part has been dedicated to the analysis of Racine's monologues using the concepts of rhetoric and pragmatic
Guillemot, Jean-Marie. "Les para-personnages dans l'oeuvre de Jean Racine." Paris 4, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA040327.
Full textBeaudouin, Valérie. "Rythme et rime de l'alexandrin classique : étude empirique des 80 000 vers du théâtre de Corneille et Racine." Phd thesis, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), 2000. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00377348.
Full textLe métromètre a été utilisé pour analyser les 80 000 vers de Corneille et Racine. Il en résulte que la structure rythmique du vers est bel et bien le résultat d'un agencement spécifique des éléments de la langue (il n'y a pas « d'accent de vers »). Nous montrons que tous les marquages, qui relèvent de composantes a priori indépendantes de la langue, contribuent chacun à leur manière à définir la forme rythmique de chaque hémistiche et du vers. Les corrélations entre ces niveaux a priori indépendants semblent être constitutives du rythme.
Parallèlement, l'examen systématique de la rime chez Corneille et Racine a permis de montrer l'existence de régularités, non attestées dans les traités de métrique (la voyelle [e] a, par exemple, toujours besoin d'une consonne d'appui) et de proposer une définition contextuelle des concepts de rime riche, suffisante ou pauvre, lesquels varient selon le type de terminaison examiné.
Enfin, nous avons tenté de montrer en quoi la structure rythmique et rimique des vers pouvait contribuer à enrichir l'analyse stylistique : nous avons ainsi mis à jour des corrélations entre des univers de discours et des rythmes spécifiques.
Szuszkin, Marc. "L'espace dans les tragédies de Racine." Paris 4, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA040174.
Full textSchoonaert, Marie. "La femme-monstre en France au XVIIe siècle (Théâtre et Iconographie)." Thesis, Limoges, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020LIMO0004.
Full textThis work presents the theme of female monstrosity from 1635 to 1697 through the specificity of four case studies : Médée, Phèdre, Méduse and Madame Jobin inspired by La Voisin. The study of different theatrical genres like tragedy, musical tragedy and comedy, but also the analysis of engraved portraits and mythological or satirical engravings highlights the successive variations of the idea of " monster woman " in the whole XVII century. This thesis attempts to show that the portrayal of female monstrosity on stage or on pictures conveys the idea that the monstrosity is gradually destroyed. This destruction of the idea of monstrosity goes with the destruction of the hero or the heroin. These ideas have already been approached by Paul Bénichou and then by Sophie Vergne. This study shows that from Médée, model of the monster woman, no other woman can equal her. Every artwork follows the political, moral or aesthetic particularities contemporary to its writing. This context limits the display, on stage in particular, of a total female monstrosity as embodied by Médée. Every one of the theatrical and iconographic artworks, from Phèdre to the character of Lustucru, shows a meaning of the monstrosity that is specific to it, depending on it’s release or performance year. It indicates how the idea of " monster woman " always adapts to its context in order to represent successfuly the idea
Tomotani, Tomoki. "Les techniques dramaturgiques dans les tragédies de Racine : essai sur la sophistique théâtrale." Paris 4, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA040005.
Full textThis study tries to clarify Racine's dramatic techniques, concerning his creation of the tragic charactors, by dwelling on the sophistical rhetoric and the theatrical paralogism. .
Ogura, Hirotaka. "La rhétorique du "naturel", limites et transgressions : étude sur le langage dramatique des pièces mythologiques et bibliques de Racine." Aix-Marseille 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997AIX10045.
Full textRacine has often been considered as a master of the "natural" style, the language ideal of classical times. In fact, this characteristic of style is limited in racine's works to the description of dramatic actions which are based upon progressions of human motifs, whereas a tragic meaning can be seen to break through poetically in transgressions of this "naturalness". In racine's mythological and biblical plays the tragic meaning is shown through the cruelty of transcendency imagery. This study will illustrate racine's poetics through concrete analysis of language organization in plays relating to the fable or to bible. Racine's poetics is based upon what may be called the rhetoric of "naturalness" and serves the essential function of bringing out the tragic aspect of these plays. Thus , it can be seen that the image of the merciless god in athalie, brought to light by the poetic reading of racine's last play, corresponds perfectly to the cruel and demoniacal conception of transcendy as earlier presented by the playwright in his first play la thebaide and further developed poetically in andromaque, iphigenie and phedre
Park, Shin Eun-Young. "Approche sémiotique des tragédies de Racine : problème de la double énonciation." Paris 4, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA040015.
Full textThe objective of this study is to analyses the seven tragedies of Racine (from Andromaque to Phèdre) by some semiotic methods in considering the specificity of the dramatic text, i. E. , the system of double enunciation. Inside of the enunciative framework 1 (author-reader), there is another fictional enunciative framework 2 (between the personages). In approaching this problem in the sight of the author, we will examine, first of all, how the author informs the reader in respecting the enunciative disposition of the theatre. The second part relates to the intra-scenic enunciative circuit. We will see how the personages inform one another, and how the dramatic action develops by the perlocutionary acts. In the third part, we will undertake a pragmatic analysis of the personages' discourse, in order to find the archi-enunciator that is in the interaction of their speech acts. To conclude, we will verify the result of our analysis in relation to the rhetoric, principal writing rules of French classical age, and this for the purpose of avoiding the possible errors caused by anachrony
Diagne, Makassa. "Le thème de la mort dans les tragédies de Racine." Rouen, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987ROUEL035.
Full textRacinian tragedy is characterized by its singularity and, above all, its diversity. The production is an amalgam of styles which highlights the theme of death from different angles. Through it, we relive the distresses, torments, bitterness and perpetual struggle of all the characters who are put in a difficult situation. Apart from this, gods, stars, ritual, love, space, time and nature are party to the enigma of death, too. All these elements convey an original significance which gives to the production all its richness
Le, Goff Virginie. "Le sacrifice racinien : une esthétique théâtrale de la duplicité." Paris 3, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1994PA030169.
Full textThis thesis presents the analysis of the theme of duplicity in the dramatic works of jean racine. An essential dramatic form in the world of racine, duplicity is a recurrent forme in the dramatic system of racine. Applied to the theatrical langage, inscribed in a situation of double communication, duplicity goes beyond the dramaturgic frame so as to reach its aesthetic value because of the manifold meanings it implied and wich invites the audience to an original way of experiencing reception. Finally, the diplicity in racine's work only become a tragical form because it is linked to the theme of sacrifice. Thus, any tragedy by racine is the representation of a sacrifice. The theme of sacrifice, wich is at stake in any of racine's tragedy, exposes the coherence of the tragical logic in racine. It sets up the double relationship between a tragical duplicity wich sacrifices and a tragical duplicity wich is sacrified. And, tragedy after tragedy, it builds up racine's theatrical aesthetics of duplicity
Maggi, Ludovica. "Herméneutique, oralité, temporalité. L’écriture traductive théâtrale de l’interprétation des classiques à la mise en voix. Phèdre et Dom Juan traduits pour la scène italienne contemporaine." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019USPCA014/document.
Full textIn this thesis, we focus on theatre classics and on the interaction between hermeneutics, orality and temporality. To this aim, we think of translation as the result of a hermeneutical process which goes beyond the text and includes an interpretation of the play as a whole. In this framework, the translator plays a central role as they interact with the source text through the hermeneutical horizon of their individual and collective culture, extracting a Sense which extends to the perception of a specific temporality and theatricality. Our hypothesis is that this Sense can be found in the orality of the translative writing, which we consider to be the projection of voice in performance and which we define as a combination of language, rhythm and vocality, resulting in a contemporary discourse about the classic work, about theatre – both past and present – and about translation itself, as well as about its relationship to time. A corpus of Italian translations of Phèdre and Dom Juan for the stage helps verify our hypothesis, while offering an insight into the reception of French classical theatre in Italy
Pleschka, Alexander. "Théatralité et public. Les drames tardifs de Schiller et la tragédie classique française." Thesis, Paris 4, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA040204.
Full textThe present study shows how Schiller, as a consequence of his reading of Kant and Diderot, includes the audience in his dramaturgy and thereby gives the scenic situation a public character, which allows him to represent political issues typical of the French Revolution. This serves to explain why Schiller’s later plays, especially Wallenstein, Maria Stuart and Demetrius, adapt some features of French classical tragedy.The first part of the study explains how, during the Querelle du Cid, contemporaries developed an awareness of how the presence of an audience lends a public quality to the situation of dramatic performance. This public quality is reflected in contemporary prescriptive poetics and employed to affect the audience in Corneille’s and Racine’s dramaturgy.The second part describes how since the 18th century viewing drama has been regarded as a genuinely subjective action, instead of being seen, as before, as a public activity taking place in front of other spectators. This mode of viewing allows creating a public sphere which is abstract in a modern sense.The third and final part states how Schiller’s aesthetics lead to a partial integration of the theatre audience into the scene, which in turn gives the scene a public character, similar to the one of the French classical period. This concept of the public character of drama is then distinguished from concepts developed in Schiller’s theoretical writings and illustrated with analyses of his later plays
Hamano, Toki. "Drame et poésie dans la tragédie racinienne : recherches sur les points de vue critiques." Paris 4, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986PA040218.
Full textOur study is essentially based on the relationship between drama and poetry in Racine’s tragedy. It stems from criticism from earlier centuries, which mainly set up Racine the poet against the playwright, casting even a doubt regarding his dramatic work. In the XVIIth c. , baffled critics, who might have been perplexed by the novelty of his work, relegate the author to a minor position, giving him a second part after Corneille. In the XVIIIth c. , too much support and praise eventually endangers the dramatist's status. The romantic revolution views Racine’s dramatic work as rather out of fashion. Curiously enough, the XXth c. Reestablishes Racine in his own part. The author, after having been made more than tedious by centuries for scholastic critics, becomes according to the abbot Bremond and the poet Valéry - the originator of an exquisite and pure poetry, a dramatist poet to be played anew and up-to-date according to Xavier de Courville and the well-known Copeau. A subject which inspired the greatest writers, playwrights and critics the world over, Racine after having lost favor is now reborn and well alive. The renewal of his staging by J. -L. Barrault and R. Planchon, the late revival of Berenice at the Comédie Française which was successfully cast by the german Klaus Gruber and the creation abroad - mainly in japan - of some of his plays, everything testifies of the strength and vitality and of the success worldwide of Racine’s tragedy
Planche, Marie-Claire. "Passions raciniennes et arts visuels : Pictura Loquens, XVIIe-XIXe siècles." Dijon, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000DIJOL004.
Full textSouchier, Marine. "Le statut de grand dramaturge au XVIIe siècle : Corneille, Racine et Molière, figures vedettes d’une histoire littéraire en construction (1640-1729)." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018SORUL121.
Full textFrom the late 17th century, Corneille, Racine and Molière are given an undeniable superiority over all other contemporary playwrights. This hierarchy, from which current literary history has inherited, continues to make us consider the pre-eminence granted to this “classical” trio as obvious and the studies devoted to the so-called “minor” authors rarely question the “major” author status. Our goal has been to study the elaboration process of the great playwright status. Thus, this PhD thesis highlights the different aspects and manifestations of this construction, retracing its stages during the authors’ lifetime — from the 1640s to the 1680s — while identifiying the factors allowing to understand why these three playwrights were given such a status, at the detriment of their colleagues and competitors. Moreover, this work studies our authors’ immediate posterity — from the 1670s to the 1720s — in order to show how the hierarchy and classification at work in the “majoration” and “minoration” process lay the foundation of French theater history. To understand how the great playwrights’ pantheon was built, we analyze the writing mechanisms of “classical” theater history and bring out the process of mythification that leads to the birth of the “sacred triad” Corneille-Racine-Molière. We then explain how the French theater history is written in praise of these authors, from and around their three figures, classicized and converted into symbols of “the age of Louis XIV”
Donaty-Prost, Brigitte. "Les jeux de l'écart : mises en scène du répertoire classique (Corneille, Molìère, Racine) en France de 1965 à nos jours." Rennes 2, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004REN20044.
Full textThis dissertation examines the major aesthetic orientations in the performance of theater plays by Corneille, Molière and Racine in France from 1965 to nowadays. The first part summarizes the experimentations during the first half of the 20th century. The second part considers how, since the 1960s, the directors have changed the hermeneutic traditions of the classical plays and renewed them, transforming the stage into a commentary of the text and of the society. The third part analyses the way they have played, in particular since two decades, with the conventions of performance, how they have deconstructed the fiction and rediscovered or reinvented the language of the 17th century
Campbell, Thomas. "La tragédie racinienne : de l'esthétique classique à la peinture des passions dans 3 oeuvres : Andromaque, Britannicus et Phèdre." Mémoire, 2008. http://www.archipel.uqam.ca/900/1/M10165.pdf.
Full textGirerd, Berthelot Noémie. "Iphigénie de Rotrou à Racine : paradoxe d'un héroïsme chrétien au féminin." Thèse, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/3709.
Full textIn the French Ancien Régime, the representations of the condition of women justify the values of male chauvinism. Nevertheless, in its economy of Salvation, Christianity gives women an important place. In the social context of Counter-Reformation, this situation defines the terms of a mystical experience of God exemplified, in literature, by a model of feminine heroism, as Christian ethics set up a feminine figure transcending her human condition through sacrifice and death. In the seventeenth century, however, the concept of abnegation and pride eradicates the short-lasting triumph of feminine heroism. Through Rotrou and Racine’s theatrical reorganization of Euripides’ Iphigenia in Aulis, we will see how both authors convey its end. In our first chapter, we will consider the space defered to women by Christianity through the cult of virginity and the transfiguration of celestial bodies. Reinstating these theological data, the mystics will mark the rise of a feminine charisma which will be deconstructed by the notion of pride in the late seventeenth century. In the second chapter, we will see how the development of heroism favours the expansion of a feminine heroic figure. In the last chapter we will analyse the failure of a mythical heroine who, by taking advantage of the Christian dogma, dangerously compromises the patriarcal order. While critics often assert the truthfull virtue of Iphigenia in Rotrou and Racine’s plays, we will intend to prove that she is, on the contrary, tragically convicted of pride by both authors.