Criticism of enlightenment period
- •
Presentation folder "Women in jazz, her side of the story" - Update 2023.09.01
E X H I B I T I O N PRESENTATION
For Marguerite Nebelsztein of the Georgette Sand Collective, one of the authors of Ni vues ni connuesPanthéon, Histoire, mémoire : où sont les femmes ?1 (2017), invisibilization is “the act of making a woman disappear from history. The various mechanisms include simply putting women on the sidelines, completely removing them, minimizing their actions, distorting their existence, diminishing or stealing their work, confining them to the role of wife or sister, and self- invisibilization.”
Convinced that gender equality relies on the notion of women’s heritage, the cultural legacy left by previous generations of women, the Mouvement HF2 has been a specialist in the field of arts and culture since 2014, notably by organizing Women’s Heritage Days, as part of the annual European Heritage Days.
Mouvement HF Occitanie LR3 presents “Women in Jazz: Her Side of the Story”, an exhibition about women who have contributed to the history of jazz. The exhibition is dedic
- •
1‑ Introduction
We would like to thank the two reviewers M.F. Bonifay and J.L. Guadelli, for their careful reading and constructive comments. The ideas expressed here, as well as any errors or omissions, are from our own. Special thanks as well to J.J. Bahain for his technical support.
1The specific geographical heterogeneity and the regional climatic peculiarity make the European (sub)continent an interesting object of paleozoogeographic study. During the last three million years, mammalian community dynamics in Europe have depended in great part in exchange and dispersal with other main regions. The Plio‑Pleistocene European faunal evolution is a complex process marked by multiple faunal immigration from Asia and Africa related to quaternary climate changes (Spassov, 2003; Brugal & Croitor, 2004; Martinez‑Navarro, 2004), and followed by competitive adaptations of those ‘external’immigrants (Koenigswald, 2006). The traditional analysis of a faunal evolution based on large‑scale faunal dispersals correlated to crude‑grained environmental and climate changes (i.e., Kurten, 19
- •
Louis de Bonald
French philosopher (1754–1840)
Louis Gabriel Ambroise, Vicomte de Bonald (2 October 1754 — 23 November 1840) was a French counter-revolutionary[2]philosopher and politician. He is mainly remembered for developing a theoretical framework from which French sociology would emerge.[3][4][5][6]
Life
Early life and education
Bonald came from an ancient noble family of Provence. Louis was born in the chateau of Le Monna, a modest estate that served as the family seat; the only son in his family, Louis was heir to the family estate. Le Monna is situated just east of the market town of Millau, overlooking the Dourbie river. His father, Antoine Sébastien de Bonald, died when Louis was four years old and the young boy would be brought up by his pious mother Anne née de Boyer du Bosc de Périe. Like many in the provincial nobility of the time, Anne was influenced by the Jansenists and brought up her son with a stern Catholic piety. De Bonald was tutored at Le Monna until the age of eleven, when he wa
Copyright ©aimbomb.pages.dev 2025