Author: M.. Champeix
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : fr
Pages : 18
Book Description
Discours prononcé, à l'occasion de la distribution des prix du Collège Classique et Moderne de jeunes filles de Brive
Author: M.. Champeix
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ISBN:
Category :
Languages : fr
Pages : 18
Book Description
Publisher:
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Category :
Languages : fr
Pages : 18
Book Description
Discours ...
Author: A. Cardin
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Discours prononcés à l'occasion de la distribution des prix
Author: Paul André Ambrogi
Publisher:
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Languages : fr
Pages : 16
Book Description
Publisher:
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Category :
Languages : fr
Pages : 16
Book Description
Discours prononcés à l'occasion de la distribution des prix (de l'école primaire supérieure et du pensionnat de l'île Rousse), par P.-A. Ambrogi
Author: Paul-André Ambrogi
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Publisher:
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Exposition d'horticulture ... Discours prononcé par le président de l'Académie royale d'agriculture à l'occasion de la distribution des prix, etc. (Estratto della Gazzetta Piemontese.).
Author: Charles Marie Joseph DESPINE
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 520
Book Description
Publisher:
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Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 520
Book Description
Discours prononcé pour la distribution des prix
Author:
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Discours prononcé par M. le président de la république, à l'occasion de la distribution des récompenses décernées aux industriels français, dont les produits ont été admis à la grande exposition de Londres, et liste des noms des personnes décorées
Author:
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Languages : fr
Pages :
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Pages :
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Discours prononcé avant la distribution des prix ...
Author: Jean Baptiste Guislain Wallez
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Languages : en
Pages :
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Languages : en
Pages :
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Discours prononeé a la distribution des prix
Author: Henri Marie Bonley
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ISBN:
Category : Domestic animals
Languages : fr
Pages : 81
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Domestic animals
Languages : fr
Pages : 81
Book Description
Discriminating Democracy
Author: Emmanuelle Sandrine Chapin
Publisher: Stanford University
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 346
Book Description
The dissertation analyzes the projects of popular theater devised by the republican governments and assemblies, 1878 to 1893, in order to understand the conflicted point of view of republicans with regard to the democratization of art. In the 1880s, the four state-subsidized theaters (the Opéra, the Opéra-Comique, the Comédie-Française, and the Odéon) had a very select audience. Yet, republicans were divided on the issue of its diversification. On the one hand, the purportedly inferior moral capacities of the popular public made dramatic performances hazardous without a prior education of its will. On the other hand, it was fair to let people who paid for the upkeep of state-subsidized theaters access these institutions and to fulfill the wish of a significant part of the population to acquaint themselves with high-brow culture. The successive projects of popular theater represent the various solutions imagined by republican governments to reconcile two contradictory impulses, democratization and discrimination. They show how a culture of prejudices, inherited from previous regimes, progressively came to terms with a new conception of justice, more respectful of individuals' autonomy and sovereignty. At the end of the 1870s, the minister of public instruction and fine arts Agénor Bardoux denied that the state had any responsibility to democratize art. He variously argued that democratization happened spontaneously or that the artistic mission of the state did not include the dissemination of works. Jules Ferry believed that the state owed a theater to the lower classes, but, convinced that lower classes were inferior in their aptitudes, he imagined a popular lyric theater that would be the pale copy of the Opéra. Finally, Léon Bourgeois accepted the director of the Opéra's proposition that the institution should organize reduced-price performances. Bourgeois thought it more conducive to social peace to promote a common culture than to cultivate separate class identities. In his mind, the difference between the people and the elite should consist in their respective degrees of exposure to high-brow culture. The study of theatrical democratization in the 1880s shows that French republicans abided by two principles of government. One, which reflected the republicans' universalist credo, advocated the equal treatment of individuals by virtue of their equal rights. The other, inspired by utilitarian tenets, defended the differentiated treatment of individuals on the grounds of their unequal aptitudes. This dissertation argues that the ambiguity of the notion of merit in the republicans' discourse (did it lie in the essence of a social group or was it the result of individuals' actions?) informed a tension between the desire to extend liberties and democratize elite practices, on the one hand, and the perceived necessity to control activities and discriminate against the people, on the other.
Publisher: Stanford University
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 346
Book Description
The dissertation analyzes the projects of popular theater devised by the republican governments and assemblies, 1878 to 1893, in order to understand the conflicted point of view of republicans with regard to the democratization of art. In the 1880s, the four state-subsidized theaters (the Opéra, the Opéra-Comique, the Comédie-Française, and the Odéon) had a very select audience. Yet, republicans were divided on the issue of its diversification. On the one hand, the purportedly inferior moral capacities of the popular public made dramatic performances hazardous without a prior education of its will. On the other hand, it was fair to let people who paid for the upkeep of state-subsidized theaters access these institutions and to fulfill the wish of a significant part of the population to acquaint themselves with high-brow culture. The successive projects of popular theater represent the various solutions imagined by republican governments to reconcile two contradictory impulses, democratization and discrimination. They show how a culture of prejudices, inherited from previous regimes, progressively came to terms with a new conception of justice, more respectful of individuals' autonomy and sovereignty. At the end of the 1870s, the minister of public instruction and fine arts Agénor Bardoux denied that the state had any responsibility to democratize art. He variously argued that democratization happened spontaneously or that the artistic mission of the state did not include the dissemination of works. Jules Ferry believed that the state owed a theater to the lower classes, but, convinced that lower classes were inferior in their aptitudes, he imagined a popular lyric theater that would be the pale copy of the Opéra. Finally, Léon Bourgeois accepted the director of the Opéra's proposition that the institution should organize reduced-price performances. Bourgeois thought it more conducive to social peace to promote a common culture than to cultivate separate class identities. In his mind, the difference between the people and the elite should consist in their respective degrees of exposure to high-brow culture. The study of theatrical democratization in the 1880s shows that French republicans abided by two principles of government. One, which reflected the republicans' universalist credo, advocated the equal treatment of individuals by virtue of their equal rights. The other, inspired by utilitarian tenets, defended the differentiated treatment of individuals on the grounds of their unequal aptitudes. This dissertation argues that the ambiguity of the notion of merit in the republicans' discourse (did it lie in the essence of a social group or was it the result of individuals' actions?) informed a tension between the desire to extend liberties and democratize elite practices, on the one hand, and the perceived necessity to control activities and discriminate against the people, on the other.