6 results on '"Maroussia Ahmed"'
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2. The Relevance of the Carnivalesque in the Québec Novel
- Author
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Maroussia Ahmed
- Subjects
German literature ,PT1-4897 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 - Abstract
The Bakhtinian concept of space is topological rather than topographic, and encompasses the cosmic, the social and the corporeal; its function in the Québec novel consists in debasing the hierarchical verticality of Lent and of the "official feast." As Carnival is an anti-law,"law" in the Québec novel will be defined as the chronotope of the sacred space (the land or "terre" of Québec) in the genre known as the "novel of the land" ("le roman de Ia terre"). Until the Second World War, this chronotope transforms an Augustinian political view of the civitas dei into literary proselytism, via the ideology of agricultural messianism. Sanctification implies closure of space and of the text; the "outside" is debased, as is textual "difference," that is, carnivalesque writing as it appears, for example, in La Scouine by Albert Laberge or in Marie Calumet by Rodolphe Girard. During the 1940s, the "introspective novel" (Robert Charbonneau, Robert Elie, Robert Choquette) also connotes the "upper" euphorically and the "lower" dysphorically, but at this historical point as a function of the sanctification of the individual according to a Thomist hierarchy. The quest of the hero can be seen as the ascent of a vertical ladder of time/space/society/values. The novel of the 1960s takes on a carnivalesque air: former sacred spaces are diminished in number and importance or are debased; new spaces appear where the body communicates with other bodies and the world. The space of knowledge is not God, but the land. Novels of this period (by M.C. Blais, R. Carrier, A. Hébert) are constructed around two paradigms according to a Manichean view of the world, and bear a great predictability, thus leading to a new set of "upside down" cliches. The carnivalesque multiple is completely realized in Hubert Aquin's first two novels. Space ceases to bear meaning other than as a metaphor for horizontal kinetic writing. The text becomes the open space of a continuous game between narrator and reader. The importance given to the margin/marginality (the footnotes), the masquerade of characters and of polysemic words, the narrative games that deconstruct the medieval Aquinian world create the space of carnivalesque scriptural relativity. But Aquin also gives a political dimension to his carnivalesque writing: his position is that only a writing of chaos can correspond to a nation which is obsolete ("révolu") and imprisoned in stasis while still aspiring to a revolution. The mediation between stasis and movement is the text which acts as a detonator or pharmakon in the mind of the reader. The study of the carnivalesque in the Québec novel leads us to the discovery of an impressive number of heroes/writers/pharmakos/witches, all having the same kinetic transformatory function which is accomplished by the same medium: the word. They point to a society in transition during the 1960s and 1970s.
- Published
- 1984
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3. Gender Patterns in Faculty Participation: A Decade of Experience at a Mid-sized University
- Author
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Julia S. O’Connor, Maroussia Ahmed, Isik U. Zeytinoglu, and Margaret Denton
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Medical education ,050402 sociology ,Academic year ,Task force ,05 social sciences ,Visibility (geometry) ,Education ,0504 sociology ,050903 gender studies ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Administration (government) ,Inclusion (education) - Abstract
This article examines the progress made at a mid-sized Ontario university in reducing gender differences in faculty participation and experience of participation in university administration, decision-making, teaching, research, and other professional activities. Based on a survey of female and male faculty and the report of a Task Force on the Integration of Female Faculty, a number of recommendations were to be implemented beginning in the 1992/93 academic year. Progress is examined in light of a commitment to integration based on the principles of inclusion, visibility of procedure, equitable treatment, and climate of support. The article concludes by discussing issues related to participation, which have relevance beyond the specifics of this case.
- Published
- 2017
4. Conclusion Migrations, translations : une réflexion en marche
- Author
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Iulian Toma, Nicholas Serruys, and Maroussia Ahmed
- Published
- 2015
5. Le colonialisme de bonne volonté a l'épreuve dans << Misère de Ia Kabylie :>> Mouloud Feraoun corrige Albert Camus.
- Author
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Allouche, Bousse, Maroussia, Ahmed, French, Allouche, Bousse, Maroussia, Ahmed, and French
- Abstract
p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 11.5px Times} span.s1 {font: 13.5px Helvetica} span.s2 {font: 15.5px Helvetica} span.s3 {font: 11.0px Times} span.s4 {font: 16.5px Helvetica} span.s5 {font: 18.0px Times} span.s6 {font: 12.0px Times} span.s7 {font: 9.0px Helvetica} span.s8 {font: 12.5px Times} Cette étude analyse s'interroge sur les fondements humaniste du cri d'injustice lancé au secours de la condition socio-économique désastreuse des Kabyles par Albert Camus dans la serie d'articles qu'il publia entre le 5 et le 15 juin 1939 dans Alger-Républicain. En nous basant sur les enseignements de la theorie postcoloniale, nous soutenons que Camus, sans peut-être s'en rendre compte, a perçu les Kabyles dans « Misère de la Kabylie} a travers le filtre deformant de la representation colonialiste. Sur la base d'indices trouves dans le texte et en référence a la typologie des acteurs de la scene coloniale établie pas Albert Memmi, nous avons déduit que Ie contenu de son reportage sur les Kabyles evoque l'attitude du colonisateur bienveillant. Le rapport d'enquete de Camus, selon nous, n'a pas échappé à l'attention de l'ecrivain kabyle Mouloud Feraoun. Dans Le Fils du pauvre, une oeuvre classique de la littérature kabyle d'expression franaçise, Mouloud Feraoun corrige la perception des Kabyles par Camus. Le Fils du pauvre se voulait une réplique indirecte à « Misere de la Kabylie. », Master of Arts (MA)
- Published
- 2010
6. Dialogues dans les harems : aux frontières de la communication (à propos du Journal d’un voyage au Levant de la comtesse de Gasparin)
- Author
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Sarga Moussa, Littérature, idéologies, représentations, XVIIIe-XIXe siècles (LIRE), Université Stendhal - Grenoble 3-École normale supérieure - Lyon (ENS Lyon)-Université Lumière - Lyon 2 (UL2)-Université Jean Monnet [Saint-Étienne] (UJM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Maroussia Ahmed, Corinne Alexandre-Garner, Nicholas Serruys, Iulian Toma, Isabelle Keller-Privat, Université Stendhal - Grenoble 3-École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Lumière - Lyon 2 (UL2)-Université Jean Monnet - Saint-Étienne (UJM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Moussa, Sarga, and Maroussia Ahmed, Corinne Alexandre-Garner, Nicholas Serruys, Iulian Toma, Isabelle Keller-Privat
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Language & Linguistics ,[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature ,Geography ,Mariage ,Harem ,langue ,Valérie de Gasparin ,JHBT ,frontière ,[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature ,migrant ,Orient ,LAN011000 ,CFH ,JFFN ,Dialogue ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,exil ,SOC005000 ,art ,SOC007000 - Abstract
Dans le tome II de son Journal d’un voyage au Levant (1848), la comtesse de Gasparin, d’origine protestante, relate les visites qu’elle a faites dans des harems de la haute société turque au Caire. Femme de dialogue, la narratrice essaie de communiquer avec quelques-unes de ses interlocutrices. Mais elle cherche aussi à les convaincre du bien-fondé de sa propre conception du mariage. Si un terrain d’entente se dégage, c’est au profit d’un modèle marital « émancipé », qui rejette à la fois le système musulman de la polygamie et la conception catholique du mariage, lequel voit dans la reproduction sa propre finalité pour confiner la femme dans des tâches domestiques. In the second volume of her Journal d’un voyage au Levant (1848), the protestant Countess of Gasparin writes about her encounters in the harem of the Turkish high society of Cairo. Interested in cultural dialogue, she tries to communicate with several of her hosts. But through the same dialogical process, she also seeks to legitimize her own understanding of the concept of marriage. While an agreement emerges between herself and her Oriental counterparts, her book clearly favours a model of « emancipated » marriage, in which she rejects both Muslim polygamy as well as the traditional Catholic conception of marriage, which sees its purpose solely in human reproduction while it marginalises women and confines them to domestic tasks.
- Published
- 2021
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