103 resultados para Roman, J. (Joseph), 1840-1924.
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RésuméA l'image de son personnage, qui se déplace en subissant toutes sortes d'expériences lui permettant de « grandir », le roman d'apprentissage traverse les siècles et les cultures en Occident, mais trouve aussi un écho tout à fait particulier parmi de nombreux romans d'Afrique noire francophone. Ce genre littéraire se découvre tant parmi les productions de l'époque coloniale que parmi les plus contemporaines et peut être envisagé en tant que métaphore d'une autonomie langagière et littéraire progressivement acquise, tout en gardant à l'esprit que les catégories génériques occidentales n'ont pas à être dupliquées telles quelles sur les productions fictionnelles africaines. L'hypothèse de travail associe les dimensions diachronique et synchronique pour observer un croisement de pratiques formelles et génériques dans les textes de fiction romanesque d'Afrique subsaharienne. Elle utilise dans ce cadre les romans Karim d'Ousmane Socé (1935) et Une Vie de boy de Ferdinand Oyono (1956).AbstractLike their protagonists, who undergo a journey and in the process come of age, coming-on-age novels have abounded and evolved throughout the centuries in the West - but they are also present in sub-Saharian African literature. The coming-of-age genre was popular during colonial times and is even more so today. Where African Francophone literature is concerned, we can take this type of novel as a metaphor for its gradually acquired linguistic and literary autonomy, keeping in mind that Western genres and patterns cannot be applied willy-nilly to this new generation of African litterateurs. Taking into account both historical and territorial aspects, we will examine African Francophone literature, stylistically and thematically, in its approch to gender. To do so, we will analyse Ousmane Socé's Karim (1935) and Ferdinand Oyono's Une vie de boy (A boy servant's life, 1956).
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The so-called < Sandwich Generation > (SG) is characterized by concurrent and competing professional, familial, and informal caregiving workloads. These stressors pose potential health risks. However, the current knowledge about SG characteristics and perceived state of health are insufficient to allow occupational health nurses to develop evidence-based interventions designed for health promotion. We aimed to describe this population and examine the relationships between these coexisting workloads and their perceived health. This study is based on a descriptive, correlational design. Employees of a Swiss public administration completed an electronic questionnaire. Of 844 respondents, 23 % are SG members. Ages of frailed parents or parents-in-law, co-residence with the latters, children still living at home predict that employees could be members of the SG. Perceived physical health status of SG members is rated better than mental health status. The heterogeneity of SG is reflected in three clusters. Finally, physical health score is the only that differs from the other health scores adjusting for clusters and sex. This study provides a foundation for developing preventive interventions targeting the SG.
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Machado-Joseph disease or Spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 is a progressive fatal neurodegenerative disorder caused by the polyglutamine-expanded protein ataxin-3. Recent studies demonstrate that RNA interference is a promising approach for the treatment of Machado-Joseph disease. However, whether gene silencing at an early time-point is able to prevent the appearance of motor behavior deficits typical of the disease when initiated before onset of the disease had not been explored. Here, using a lentiviral-mediated allele-specific silencing of mutant ataxin-3 in an early pre-symptomatic cerebellar mouse model of Machado-Joseph disease we show that this strategy hampers the development of the motor and neuropathological phenotypic characteristics of the disease. At the histological level, the RNA-specific silencing of mutant ataxin-3 decreased formation of mutant ataxin-3 aggregates, preserved Purkinje cell morphology and expression of neuronal markers while reducing cell death. Importantly, gene silencing prevented the development of impairments in balance, motor coordination, gait and hyperactivity observed in control mice. These data support the therapeutic potential of RNA interference for Machado-Joseph disease and constitute a proof of principle of the beneficial effects of early allele-specific silencing for therapy of this disease.
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Recherches médiévales, 4, série Magistralia. Leçons et lectures, 1. Choix, notices et avant-propos d'Alain Corbellari
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Issu de la fin du Moyen Âge, le Roman de Perceforest est le plus long texte que le Moyen Âge nous ait laissé. Il entend décrire la vie des ancêtres préchrétiens d'Arthur et de ses chevaliers en les faisant descendre d'Alexandre le Grand. Au fil de son récit, l'auteur met en place une véritable poétique de la reprise, tant externe qu'interne. Il multiplie les références à des textes préexistants issus de différentes matières et va même jusqu'à en intégrer des morceaux entiers. Il reprend par ailleurs des parties de sa propre oeuvre, n'hésitant pas à reproduire des schémas, voire des séquences narratives précises. Cette esthétique répétitive a plusieurs conséquences, tant sur l'appartenance générique du texte, sur sa construction, que sur sa réception par le lecteur. Elle est au coeur de notre étude. Nous nous intéressons plus spécifiquement à un phénomène particulier de reprise qui montre l'intégration d'une séquence préexistante dans un contexte distinct de son apparition d'origine et que nous qualifions d'emprunt. Notre travail s'organise autour d'un examen successif des différents types d'emprunts qui apparaissent au sein du texte, tant intertextuels qu'intratextuels. À terme, c'est la cohérence et l'individualité du Perceforest, ainsi que la conception de l'écriture qui anime son auteur que nous mettons en avant, tout en proposant des jalons pour une théorie générale de l'emprunt. - The Roman de Perceforest, the longest known text from the Middle Ages, aims to describe the life of Arthur's pre-christian ancestors and knights, presenting them as descendants of Alexander the Great. Along the storytelling, a genuine poetics of external and internal repetition takes place: the Perceforest s authors multiply the references to previous texts belonging to several materials, integrating sometimes entire parts of other texts. Furthermore the narrative reproduces its own patterns and particular sequences in different places of the text. Throughout this research, we consider the influence of such repetition aesthetics on the literary genre definition, on its construction as well as on the reader's reception. In this dissertation, we explore a specific category of repetitions where pre-existing sequences are embedded in a narrative context that differs from the original context of occurrence, which we called emprunt (s). Reviewing the species of inter- and intra-textual recurrences occurring within the text, we reveal some overlooked aspects of the consistency, the specificity of the Perceforest and its author's idea of writing, striving to groundwork on general theory of «emprunts» that shall thereby be laid.