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Le bruissement de la langue

01 Jan 1993-
About: The article was published on 1993-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 185 citations till now.
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2010
TL;DR: This paper analyzed the characteristics of migrant literature and tried to show its appurtenance to the post-modernist stream using Passages (1992), a novel by Emile Ollivier, and discussed multiple identities, cultural backgrounds and mixed languages.
Abstract: This research aims to show that migrant literature is reflecting and building convergent cultures. Using Passages (1992), a novel by Emile Ollivier, we analysed the characteristics of migrant literature and tried to show its appurtenance to the postmodernist stream. We therefore discussed multiple identities, cultural backgrounds and mixed languages. Keywords: Migrant literature, Identity, Multiple affiliations, Exile, Anchors and language mixing, Postmodernism

4 citations

01 Apr 2013
TL;DR: Baez, Jesica Mariana, et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a paper on Filosofia and Letras at the Universidad de Buenos Aires (Universidad de Argentina).
Abstract: Fil: Baez, Jesica Mariana. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Filosofia y Letras. Instituto de Ciencias de la Educacion; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas; Argentina

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Sandra Rousseau1
TL;DR: The authors theorise les moyens donnes aux humoristes pour limiter le risque diterativite des stereotypes qu’ils utilisent sur scene a des fins comiques.
Abstract: Cet article theorise les moyens donnes aux humoristes pour limiter le risque d’iterativite des stereotypes qu’ils utilisent sur scene a des fins comiques. La reussite ou l’echec de la performance d...

4 citations


Cites background from "Le bruissement de la langue"

  • ...Après le texte de Beardsley (1954) puis « La mort de l’auteur » de Roland Barthes (1984), il fut difficile de juger d’un objet littéraire ou culturel en termes de volonté ou d’intention....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
18 Jun 2016
TL;DR: In this article, an analise de conteudo realizada a uma amostra de revistas de Ciencias da Comunicacao de Portugal, do Brazil, and de Espanha, with the goal of avaliar o grau de conhecimento - ou desconheção - mutuo dos investigadores daqueles tres paises.
Abstract: Este texto apresenta e discute os resultados da analise de conteudo realizada a uma amostra de revistas de Ciencias da Comunicacao de Portugal, do Brasil e de Espanha e cujo objetivo consistiu em avaliar o grau de conhecimento – ou desconhecimento - mutuo dos investigadores daqueles tres paises. Essa analise incidiu, nomeadamente, na nacionalidade dos autores que publicaram artigos nessas revistas e dos outros autores que indicaram como referencias nesses artigos.

3 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors examine the responses that some French historians, philosophers, and literary theorists have given to Hayden White and his followers' well-known thesis: namely, that there is very little difference between historical events.
Abstract: As the titles of such recent studies as Gérard Noiriel’s Sur la ‘‘crise’’ de l’histoire and Keith Windschuttle’s The Killing of History testify, history has been going through a period of questioning. According to Roger Chartier, such questioning is particularly noticeable in France because of the position that history had attained there from the 1930s to the 1970s, during the reign of the Annales school: the position of a master discipline, which would unify the social sciences. Since the 1980s, Chartier explains in the introduction to his recent volume of essays Au bord de la falaise, French history has been in a time of ‘‘worry’’ (9), when many of its prior certainties are being doubted and challenged. That challenge may first bear on the contents of research, such as Fernand Braudel’s and Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie’s project of a ‘‘total history’’ that could account for the social, economic, and cultural aspects of a given society. It may touch on methods, such as the reliance on a structural analysis grounded in quantification. And it may concern epistemology, such as the belief that there is a fixed and determinable past, which historians can describe objectively, in a way that is clearly distinct from the way of novelists. My purpose is to take up a few issues related to this last matter. Specifically, I will examine the responses that some French historians, philosophers, and literary theorists have given to Hayden White and his followers’ well-known thesis: namely, that there is very little difference between historical

3 citations