4 resultados para Sentiment de cohésion
em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça
Resumo:
The status of Islam in Western societies remains deeply contentious. Countering strident claims on both the right and left, Legal Integration of Islam offers an empirically informed analysis of how four liberal democracies—France, Germany, Canada, and the United States—have responded to the challenge of integrating Islam and Muslim populations. Demonstrating the centrality of the legal system to this process, Christian Joppke and John Torpey reject the widely held notion that Europe is incapable of accommodating Islam and argue that institutional barriers to Muslim integration are no greater on one side of the Atlantic than the other. While Muslims have achieved a substantial degree of equality working through the courts, political dynamics increasingly push back against these gains, particularly in Europe. From a classical liberal viewpoint, religion can either be driven out of public space, as in France, or included without sectarian preference, as in Germany. But both policies come at a price—religious liberty in France and full equality in Germany. Often seen as the flagship of multiculturalism, Canada has found itself responding to nativist and liberal pressures as Muslims become more assertive. And although there have been outbursts of anti-Islamic sentiment in the United States, the legal and political recognition of Islam is well established and largely uncontested. Legal Integration of Islam brings to light the successes and the shortcomings of integrating Islam through law without denying the challenges that this religion presents for liberal societies.
Resumo:
The awakening of national consciousness went hand in hand in Bohemia with an anxiety about national disappearance. In this context, the recourse to Pan-Slavism was for the Czechs a way to encourage themselves through the idea of belonging to a great Slavic world, while the Slavic Congress organized in Prague in 1848 was an attempt to realize this ideal. The Congress was a failure from the political point of view, but it did have some socio-cultural repercussions: notably, it served as a pretext for the advancement of women's issues in Bohemia. It is indeed in the wake of the Congress that Honorata z Wiśniowskich Zapová, a Polish women settled in Prague after her marriage to a Czech intellectual, founded, under the guise of collaboration between all Slavic women, the first women's association, as well as a (very short-lived) Czech-Polish institute, where Czech, as well as Polish girls, could get a quality education in their mother tongue. Honorata was undoubtedly the source of the polonophilia wind that seemed to blow over the Czech emancipation movement in the second half of the nineteenth century. In particular, Karolina Světlá showed in her Memoirs a great recognition for Honorata's efforts in matters of emancipation and education, and explicitly took up the challenge launched by the latter in founding another women's association and in inaugurating a school for underprivileged girls. But the tribute Světlá paid to Honorata is even more evident in her literary work, where Poland and the Polish woman (who often wears Honorata's features) play a significant role (see for example her short novel Sisters or her story A Few Days in the Life of a Prague Dandy). Světlá was probably the Czech feminist writer who, in her activities and in her work, relied most strongly on the Polish woman as a model for the Czech woman. However, she wasn't alone. In general, it was a characteristic of the Czech feminist movement of the second half of the nineteenth century to have recourse to the Polish woman and to Poland as a landmark for comparison and as a goal to be achieved.
Resumo:
Le poète Ossip Mandelstam a été habité toute sa vie par un sentiment d’exil et de déracinement dont les causes sont diverses (« chaos judaïque » de son enfance, déménagements incessants, expérience de catastrophes historiques, etc.) : son ralliement au mouvement acméiste peut se comprendre comme une tentative de lutter contre ce sentiment au niveau de l’imaginaire. Le programme acméiste, contrairement au mouvement symboliste qui déprécie les choses d’ici bas au profit d’une réalité transcendante, peut en effet se définir comme une tentative de rendre au monde une certaine matérialité et hospitalité. Dans ce contexte, Mandelstam privilégie le motif architectural, qui lui fournit de nombreuses images de l’abri, du logement et de la protection, tout particulièrement dans son recueil intitulé Pierre. Néanmoins, si les images architecturales convoquées par Mandelstam apaisent momentanément sa soif d’un foyer, elles ne sont pas suffisantes : le poète invoque encore le pouvoir et le statut ontologique particuliers de la langue russe, seule langue capable selon lui de retrouver l’âme des choses et de faire que le poète se sente chez soi dans le monde.