Un guide pour créer une garde-robe polyvalente et intemporelle

Un guide pour créer une garde-robe polyvalente et intemporelle

Author: MAX EDITORIAL

Publisher: Max Editorial

Published: 2024-05-29

Total Pages: 84

ISBN-13: 177971453X

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Avoir une garde-robe polyvalente et intemporelle est le rêve de nombreuses personnes. Une garde-robe comme celle-ci vous permet de bien vous habiller en toute occasion, sans avoir à dépenser beaucoup d'argent ou à acheter constamment de nouveaux vêtements. Dans cet ebook, vous apprendrez tout ce que vous devez savoir pour constituer une garde-robe polyvalente et intemporelle. Nous aborderons les sujets suivants : •Qu'est-ce qui rend une garde-robe polyvalente et intemporelle ? •Comment organiser votre garde-robe •Quelles sont les pièces incontournables d'un dressing polyvalent et intemporel ? •Comment combiner les pièces de votre garde-robe •Comment prendre soin de vos vêtements Qu'est-ce qui rend une garde-robe polyvalente et intemporelle ? Une garde-robe polyvalente est celle qui vous permet de créer des looks différents avec les mêmes pièces. Une garde-robe intemporelle est une garde-robe qui ne se démode pas avec le temps. Pour qu'une garde-robe soit polyvalente, il est important qu'elle contienne des pièces basiques qui peuvent être combinées entre elles. Ces pièces doivent être de qualité et bien coupées, pour que vous vous sentiez bien en les portant. Pour qu'une garde-robe soit intemporelle, il est important qu'elle soit composée de pièces classiques qui ne soient pas influencées par les tendances de la mode. Ces pièces doivent être de couleur neutre et de coupe simple. Apprenez-en bien plus...


Beauvoir in Time

Beauvoir in Time

Author: Meryl Altman

Publisher: Value Inquiry Book

Published: 2020

Total Pages: 570

ISBN-13: 9789004431201

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"Beauvoir in Time situates Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex in the historical context of its writing and in later contexts of its international reception, from then till now. The book takes up three aspects of Beauvoir's work more recent feminists find embarrassing: "bad sex," "dated" views about lesbians, and intersections with race and class. Through close reading of her writing in many genres, alongside contemporaneous discourses (good and bad novels in French and English, outmoded psychoanalytic and sexological authorities, ethnographic surrealism, the writing of Richard Wright and Franz Fanon), and in light of her travels to the U.S. and China, the author uncovers insights more recent feminist methodologies obscure, showing Beauvoir is still good to think with today"--


Rebel Daughters

Rebel Daughters

Author: Sara E. Melzer

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 1992-05-21

Total Pages: 309

ISBN-13: 0195344987

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This interdisciplinary collection of essays examines the important and paradoxical relation between women and the French Revolution. Although the male leaders of the Revolution depended on the women's active militant participation, they denied to women the rights they helped to establish. At the same time that women were banned from the political sphere, "woman" was transformed into an allegorical figure which became the very symbol of (masculine) Liberty and Equality. This volume analyzes how the revolutionary process constructed a new gender system at the foundation of modern liberal culture.


Marrano as Metaphor

Marrano as Metaphor

Author: Elaine Marks

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 9780231103084

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When Europeans in the Middle Ages spoke of "marranos," they were making a derogatory reference to "crypto-Jews"--those who publicly converted to and performed as Christians, but who remained secretly faithful to Judaic law. Today, asserts Elaine Marks in Marrano as Metaphor, the concept can be used to describe all Jews living in a dominant Christian or Muslim culture, whatever may be their conscious relationship to Judaism. A sweeping examination of the Jewish presence in French literature from the sixteenth century to the present, Marrano as Metaphor explores the many shapes and forms in which jews are perceived, spoken, and written about. Employing a wide spectrum of analytical methods from history, literary theory and psychoanalysis, renowned French scholar Elaine Marks opens new doors in the study of literature. Marrano as Metaphor investigates questions of difference and assimilation, of respect and derogation, in a wide range of French literature--from Alain Robbe-Grillet's discussion in his memoirs of his parents' antisemitism to the story of Esther through Jean Racine and Marcel Proust; from efforts to address Jewish issues in the writings of Marguerite Duras and Jean-Paul Sartre to the secular, "assimilated" Jewish tradition of Jacques Derrida and Helene Cixous. Marks looks closely at strains of antisemitism running through French literature, analyzing such antecedents as the nihilism of the 1880s and its meditation on death and absence.


Facing Postmodernity

Facing Postmodernity

Author: Max Silverman

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2012-10-12

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13: 1134795092

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Facing Postmodernity explains French cultural theory by grounding it in the politics of the issues facing France today such as: * the breaking of the city * racism * the crisis of culture * new citizenship. It discusses some of the major responses to postmodernity by contemporary French thinkers, both the very well known -Lyotard, Levinas, Derrida - and those who will be less familiar to a non-French audience. In doing so, it addresses the questions central to the postmodern debate whatever country it takes place in; questions of history, of representation, identity and community.


Palimpsestic Memory

Palimpsestic Memory

Author: Max Silverman

Publisher: Berghahn Books

Published: 2013-02-01

Total Pages: 214

ISBN-13: 0857458841

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The interconnections between histories and memories of the Holocaust, colonialism and extreme violence in post-war French and Francophone fiction and film provide the central focus of this book. It proposes a new model of ‘palimpsestic memory’, which the author defines as the condensation of different spatio-temporal traces, to describe these interconnections and defines the poetics and the politics of this composite form. In doing so it is argued that a poetics dependent on tropes and techniques, such as metaphor, allegory and montage, establishes connections across space and time which oblige us to perceive cultural memory not in terms of its singular attachment to a particular event or bound to specific ethno-cultural or national communities but as a dynamic process of transfer between different moments of racialized violence and between different cultural communities. The structure of the book allows for both the theoretical elaboration of this paradigm for cultural memory and individual case-studies of novels and films.


Radical Museology

Radical Museology

Author: Claire Bishop

Publisher: Walther Konig Verlag

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 84

ISBN-13:

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Radical museology is a vivid manifesto for the contemporary as a method rather than a periodization, and for the importance of a politicized representation of history in museum of contemporary art."--pub. desc.


French Lessons

French Lessons

Author: Alice Kaplan

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2018-04-19

Total Pages: 239

ISBN-13: 022656648X

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“[A] cultural odyssey, a brave attempt to articulate the compulsions that drove [Kaplan] to embrace foreignness in order to become truly herself.” —The Washington Post Book World Brilliantly uniting the personal and the critical, French Lessons is a powerful autobiographical experiment. It tells the story of an American woman escaping into the French language and of a scholar and teacher coming to grips with her history of learning. In spare, midwestern prose, by turns intimate and wry, Kaplan describes how, as a student in a Swiss boarding school and later in a junior year abroad in Bordeaux, she passionately sought the French “r,” attentively honed her accent, and learned the idioms of her French lover. When, as a graduate student, her passion for French culture turned to the elegance and sophistication of its intellectual life, she found herself drawn to the language and style of the novelist Louis-Ferdinand Celine. At the same time, she was repulsed by his anti-Semitism. At Yale in the late 70s, during the heyday of deconstruction she chose to transgress its apolitical purity and work on a subject “that made history impossible to ignore”: French fascist intellectuals. Kaplan’s discussion of the “de Man affair” —the discovery that her brilliant and charismatic Yale professor had written compromising articles for the pro-Nazi Belgian press—and her personal account of the paradoxes of deconstruction are among the most compelling available on this subject. French Lessons belongs in the company of Sartre’s Words and the memoirs of Nathalie Sarraute, Annie Ernaux, and Eva Hoffman. No book so engrossingly conveys both the excitement of learning and the moral dilemmas of the intellectual life.