Dictionnaire Des Verbes Oublies Ou Delaisses
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Author | : François Mottier |
Publisher | : Lulu.com |
Total Pages | : 91 |
Release | : 2012-05 |
Genre | : Reference |
ISBN | : 2917250585 |
A l'heure ou, parait-il, notre belle langue francaise est en danger, attaquee de toutes parts par les anglicismes et autres envahisseurs irrespectueux de l'orthographe et de la grammaire que sont email, sms, texto... Voila qu'un auteur SUISSE francophone et francophile propose son dictionnaire des verbes oublies ou delaisses de la langue francaise. Pourvu que le papier de ce livre ne fonge pas, que les couleurs de la couverture n'emboisent point afin de vous permettre de decouvrir ou de redecouvrir que le Francais est une langue bien vivante puisqu'en constante evolution. Apparoir, barbeyer, charbouiller, debiller, ebarouir, falaiser, friller... font partie des 958 verbes oublies ou delaisses que vous allez trouver dans ce Dictionnaire devenu Sanctuaire et dont vous allez connaitre la definition et savoir ce qu'ils sont devenus de nos jours...
Author | : Jack I. Abecassis |
Publisher | : JHU Press |
Total Pages | : 267 |
Release | : 2020-03-03 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1421429101 |
Honorable Mention winner in the Modern Language Association's Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize competition for French and Francophone Literary Studies A major figure in twentieth-century letters, Albert Cohen (1895–1981) left a paradoxical legacy. His heavily autobiographical, strikingly literary, and polyphonic novels and lyrical essays are widely read by a devout public in France, yet have been largely ignored by academia. A self-consciously Jewish writer and activist, Cohen remained nevertheless ambivalent about Judaism. His self-affirmation as a Jew in juxtaposition with his satirical use of anti-Semitic stereotypes still provokes unease in both republican France and institutional Judaism. In Albert Cohen: Dissonant Voices, the first English-language study of this profound and profoundly misunderstood writer, Jack I. Abecassis traces the recurrent themes of Cohen's works. He reveals the dissonant fractures marking Cohen as a modernist, and analyzes the resistance to his work as a symptom of the will not to understand Cohen's main theme—"the catastrophe of being Jewish."For Abecassis, Cohen's diverse oeuvre forms a single "roman fleuve" exploring this perturbing theme through fragmentation and grotesquerie, fantasies and nightmares, the veiling and unveiling of the unspeakable. Abecassis argues that Cohen should not be read exclusively through the prism of European literature (Stendhal, Tolstoy, Proust), but rather as the retelling—inverting and ultimately exhausting, in the form of submerged plots—of the Biblical romances of Joseph and Esther. The romance of the charismatic Court Jew and its performance correlative, the carnival of Purim, generate the logic of Cohen's acute psychological ambivalence, historical consciousness and carnal sensuality—themes which link this modernist author to Genesis as well as to the literary practices of Sephardic crypto-Jews. Abecassis argues that Cohen's best-known work, Belle du Seigneur (1968), besides being an obvious tale of obsessive love and dissolution, is foremost a tale of political intrigue involving Solal, the meteoric-rising Jew in the League of Nations during the period of Appeasement (1936), and his ultimate self-destruction. Providing close readings and imaginative analyses of the entire literary output of one of twentieth-century France's most important Jewish writers, Abecassis presents here a major work of literary scholarship, as well as a broader study of the reception and influence of Jewish thought in French literature and philosophy.
Author | : John Stuart Mill |
Publisher | : Springer Science & Business |
Total Pages | : 328 |
Release | : 1988 |
Genre | : Economics |
ISBN | : 9780802026743 |
Author | : Paul K. Saint-Amour |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 369 |
Release | : 2015 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0190200944 |
Tense Future falls into two parts. The first develops a critical account of total war discourse and addresses the resistant potential of acts, including acts of writing, before a future that looks barred or predetermined by war. Part two shifts the focus to long interwar narratives that pit both their scale and their formal turbulence against total war's portrait of the social totality, producing both ripostes and alternatives to that portrait in the practice of literary encyclopedism. The book's introduction grounds both parts in the claim that industrialized warfare, particularly the aerial bombing of cities, intensifies an under-examined form of collective traumatization: a pretraumatic syndrome in which the anticipation of future-conditional violence induces psychic wounds. Situating this claim in relation to other scholarship on "critical futurities," Saint-Amour discusses its ramifications for trauma studies, historical narratives generally, and the historiography of the interwar period in particular. The introduction ends with an account of the weak theory of modernism now structuring the field of modernist studies, and of weak theory's special suitability for opposing total war, that strongest of strong theories.
Author | : Jean-Jacques Rousseau |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 1094 |
Release | : 1915 |
Genre | : Political science |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Fernand Cabrol |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 744 |
Release | : 1934 |
Genre | : Christian antiquities |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Jody Blake |
Publisher | : Penn State Press |
Total Pages | : 232 |
Release | : 1999-01-01 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 9780271017532 |
Jody Blake demonstrates in this book that although the impact of African-American music and dance in France was constant from 1900 to 1930, it was not unchanging. This was due in part to the stylistic development and diversity of African-American music and dance, from the prewar cakewalk and ragtime to the postwar Charleston and jazz. Successive groups of modernists, beginning with the Matisse and Picasso circle in the 1900s and concluding with the Surrealists and Purists in the 1920s, constructed different versions of la musique and la danse negre. Manifested in creative and critical works, these responses to African-American music and dance reflected the modernists' varying artistic agendas and historical climates.
Author | : Chanthalangsy, Phinith |
Publisher | : UNESCO Publishing |
Total Pages | : 236 |
Release | : 2014-12-31 |
Genre | : Philosophy |
ISBN | : 9231010069 |
Author | : Tobias Smollett |
Publisher | : Lulu.com |
Total Pages | : 448 |
Release | : 1812 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 1716126584 |
Author | : A. B. Yehoshua |
Publisher | : HMH |
Total Pages | : 383 |
Release | : 1993-05-07 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 0547542453 |
New York Times Notable Book: A story of six generations of a Jewish family, by an author Saul Bellow called “one of Israel’s world-class writers.” In this novel, a winner of both the National Jewish Book Award and the first Israeli Literature Prize, A. B. Yehoshua weaves a deeply affecting family saga and an portrait of Jewish life over the past two centuries. The story moves backward through time, unfolding over the course of five conversations. On a kibbutz in the Negev in 1982, a student describes her strange meeting with her boyfriend’s father, Judge Gavriel Mani. On German-occupied Crete in 1944, a Nazi soldier recounts his attempts to hunt down the Mani family. In Jerusalem in 1918, a Jewish lawyer in the British army briefs his commanding officer on the forthcoming trial of the political agitator Yosef Mani. In a village in southern Poland in 1899, a young doctor reports back to his father on his travels, and on his sister’s romance with Dr. Moshe Mani. And in Athens in 1848, Avraham Mani reveals the heartbreaking tale of the death of his son, Yonef, in Jerusalem. Alfred Kazin hailed Mr. Mani as “one of the most remarkable pieces of fiction I have ever read.” Named as one of the best books of the year by Publishers Weekly, it is both an absorbing tale and a powerful statement about family, faith, and the weight of history. Translated from the Hebrew by Hillel Halkin