1,534 research outputs found

    La distribution des fruits coloniaux en France : étude géographique de marché

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    Paul Petithuguenin (1876-1955)

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    L'évolution et la modernisation d'une documentation scientifique spécialisée

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    Trois séances: 1¼) le choix du document et la rédaction du résumé (Pr. M. Drouineau). Utilité des résumés d'auteurs - nécessité pour une documentation spécialisée de s'étendre à des secteurs des sciences fondamentales difficultés nouvelles dues à la dispersion des sujets dans la littérature. 2¼) la sélection du document en fonction de la recherche rétrospective (Pr. M. Poindron) exposés des trois types d'index automatisés: IFAC, biological Abstracts, Physindex. Les expériences d'automatisation. 3¼) stockage sous forme de microcopie des documents et problèmes de restitution (Prt M. Bastardie) nécessité d'une automatisation très poussée de la restitution, même et surtout pour de petits centres spécialisé

    Childhood

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    Fiction by Diane Master

    ‘Stick that knife in me’: Shane Meadows’ children

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    This article brings Shane Meadows’ Dead Man's Shoes (2004) into dialogue with the history of the depiction of the child on film. Exploring Meadows’ work for its complex investment in the figure of the child on screen, it traces the limits of the liberal ideology of the child in his cinema and the structures of feeling mobilised by its uses – at once aesthetic and sociological – of technologies of vision

    Anarchy in the UK: Reading Beryl the Peril via historic conceptions of childhood

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    © 2014 Taylor & Francis. Much work within the field of childhood studies has focused on the social discourses through which childhood is understood. This article draws on this work in developing a critical framework for considering the appeal of Beryl the Peril. The article examines the influence of conceptualisations of childhood prevalent in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These theorised children as disruptive and requiring restraint. Approved literature for children sought to socialise them into the adult order. However, a more subversive strain, identifiable in Lewis Carroll's Alice novels, celebrated an anarchic vision of childhood. This article examines how Beryl the Peril negotiated these conflicting conceptions of childhood. Beryl is an unruly force; her opponent, and representative of social authority, is Dad. Their clashes play out the tensions in these articulations of childhood. The development of Beryl over nearly 60 years provides an opportunity to examine how her subversive spirit has remained appealing
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