Search results for "idéal"

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La relation éducative au cours du XVIIIème siècle

2013

18th century writing on education seems to give an important place to the relationship between master and pupil.This is first seen in the way the Ancien Regime school is discussed in 1726 in Charles Rollin’s Traité des études, also in the educational anthropology in Rousseau’s Émile ou de l’Éducation (1762) and the royal institution in Condillac’s Cours d’étude (1776) ; and finally in the upbringing, home education Alman’s children receive in Stéphanie de Genlis’ Adèle et Théodore (1782). Indeed, the relationship between master and pupil raises several questions at this time of intellectual ferment, when minds were filled with ideas of man’s perfectibility. Our corpus brings together variou…

Home and public educationSchoolMaster[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureEnlightenment[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationPromethean daydream[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationInstitution princièrePupilAnthropologie éducative[ SHS.EDU ] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationEducational ideal[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureDisciple[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureEducational relationshipCollègeRelation éducativePrince educationSiècle des LumièresMaîtreRêverie prométhéenneÉducation publique et domestiqueIdéal pédagogique
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Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement

2016

In the 1930s, the lingering absence of God and of a stable reality engulfed the work of the poet Hugh MacDiarmid, leader of the Scottish Renaissance Movement. To counter this void, like many others at the time, MacDiarmid found refuge in communism and nationalism and started to write political and idealist poetry. In his poems, his political idealism comes into being in the association of reality and ideal, symbolised first by Jean and Sophia, the characters of A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle (1926), and duplicated later in the fantasised image of Lenin, perfect blending of idea and action. Rejecting Sartre’s denial of the political effect poetry can have, the violence of MacDiarmid’s work…

[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literaturemedia_common.quotation_subjectidealPerformative utteranceIdeal (ethics)[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesPower (social and political)[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteraturePoliticsviolencedeuilIdealismidéallcsh:Social sciences (General)realitymedia_commonLiteraturelcsh:English languagePoetrybusiness.industrycommitmentréalitéArtNationalismpoésiePoeticslcsh:H1-99[SHS] Humanities and Social SciencesHugh MacDiarmidmourninglcsh:PE1-3729businessengagementpoetry
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