479 resultados para LISE
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Collection : Bibliothèque Saint-Germain
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In this thesis, I explore how the folk-rock music of Ani DiFranco has influenced the activist commitments, sensibilities, and activities of reproductive rights activists. My interest in the relation of popular music to social movements is informed by the work of Simon Frith (1987, 1996a, 1996b), Rob Rosenthal (2001), and Ann Savage (2003). Frith argues that popular music is an important contributor to personal identity and the ways that listeners see the world. Savage (2003) writes that fans develop a unique relationship with feminist/political music, and Rosenthal (2001) argues that popular music can be an important factor in building social movements. I use these arguments to ask what the influence of Ani DiFranco's music has been for reproductive rights activists who are her fans. I conducted in-depth interviews with ten reproductive rights activists who are fans of Ani DiFranco's music. All ten are women in their twenties and thirties living in Ontario or New York. Each has been listening to DiFranco's music for between two and fifteen years, and has considered herself a reproductive rights activist for between eighteen months and twenty years. I examine these women's narratives of their relationships with Ani DiFranco's music and their activist experience through the interconnected lenses of identity, consciousness, and practice. Listening to Ani DiFranco's music affects the fluid ways these women understand their identities as women, as feminists, and in solidarity with others. I draw on Freire's (1970) understanding of conscientization to consider the role that Ani's music has played in heightening women's awareness about reproductive rights issues. The feeling of solidarity with other (both real and perceived) activist fans gives them more confidence that they can make a difference in overcoming social injustice. They believe that Ani's music encourages productive anger, which in turn fuels their passion to take action to make change. Women use Ani's music deliberately for energy and encouragement in their continued activism, and find that it continues to resonate with their evolving identities as women, feminists, and activists. My study builds on those of Rosenthal (2001) and Savage (2003) by focusing on one artist and activists in one social movement. The characteristics of Ani DiFranco, her fan base, and the reproductive rights movement allow new understanding of the ways that female fans who are members of a female-dominated feminist movement interact with the music of a popular independent female artist.
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This is a descriptive study of elementary school teachers' perceptions of values transmitted in classrooms. Through circulation of a survey to teachers in Public and Separate Schools in the "Golden I-Iorseshoe" distt-ict of SOLtthern Ontario (e}{clLtding Toronto), it was found that teachers do see themselves as promoting values which tend to be conceptual or knowledge-based and receptive and pertain to self-perception and personal growth. They also show a tendency t.o Lise nlore conceptL\al teachi ng strategies SLieri as discussiona The respondents had no clear opinion regarding student disposition toward values but did feel very influential in developing that disposition. Demographic factors of gender, age, teaching division and teaching experience affected the responses to the surveYa The study was undertaken to describe a very sensitive area in education in the hope of moving closer toward a more effective school system II.
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Affiliation: Jacqueline Rousseau : École de réadaptation, Faculté de médecine, Université de Montréal
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Affiliation: Maude Loignon, Lise Cyr & Emil Toma : Département de microbiologie et immunologie, Faculté de médecine, Université de Montréal
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Un résumé en anglais est également disponible.
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The BRAD group is composed of/ Le groupe BRAD est composé de : Sylvie Belleville, Gina Bravo, Louise Demers, Philippe Landreville, Louisette Mercier, Nicole Paquet, Hélène Payette, Constant Rainville, Bernadette Ska and René Verreault.
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Depuis deux siècles, les transformations les plus remarquables du phénomène du suicide concernent la relation avec la variable âge. En effet, le suicide a longtemps progressé avec l'âge pour culminer à la vieillesse, mais le dernier quart de siècle au Québec a vu ce rapport modifié, suggérant qu'il s'agit désormais d'un phénomène de jeunes. Notre étude examine les tendances récentes de l'évolution de la mortalité par suicide au Québec du point de vue de l'âge, discute des effets respectifs possibles de l'âge, de la période et de la génération de 1926 à 2004 et offre des pistes d'interprétation sociologique. Nous présentons dans un premier temps les transformations de la société québécoise depuis 1930 ainsi qu'un bilan synthétique des connaissances sur le suicide au Québec par rapport aux tendances internationales, ceci du point de vue de différentes variables sociodémographiques. Notre étude rappelle ensuite les grandes théories et idées sur le suicide, de la littérature classique aux réflexions contemporaines. On y remarque que la variable âge est rarement au coeur de ces conceptions, mais plutôt en marge de celles-ci, médiatisées par d'autres variables sociales. Les résultats de notre analyse montrent la présence d'un net effet de génération dans l'évolution de la mortalité masculine due au suicide au Québec. Ce phénomène n'est pas présent chez les femmes. Les générations récentes adoptent toutefois un comportement différent de celles des baby-boomers et il sera intéressant de suivre leur trajectoire dans l'avenir.
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Un résumé en anglais est également disponible.
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Un résumé en anglais est également disponible.
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Un résumé en anglais est également disponible.