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For English language geography, the social production of sexualised and sexualised spaces has become a legitimate research object. This applies equally to anthropology, history or sociology, provided that these disciplines take into account the spatial dimension of the phenomena they study. For this research — which also looks at the conditions for research and the epistemological foundations of the disciplines — spatial planning (landscapes, cartographic representations, neighbourhoods, etc.) is thus at the same time gender (women's places, men's places) and heterosexuality (places which are 'predominantly' bulky or bulky). However, because the most official cultural forms (civil status, political behaviour, monuments, etc.) are most often based on imaginably heterosexual forms, the search for homosexuality has fought popular cultures and economic forms of social organisation. While stressing the value of such an approach, which establishes tools for understanding, we must, however, reverse the balancier: at a time when same-sex couples are recognised by marital status, sexual orientation is becoming a form of political capital and monumentalisation of gays and lesbians, other spaces are beside the commercial space. Local churches are committed to capture the interest and energy of gays and lesbians living close to their buildings. Commercial and urban: the gay space is often described as that of the city, and the study of gay neighbourhoods, research sites for American sociologists and urban geographers since the early 1970s, has sometimes been carried out using the immigration model. These neighbourhoods could be analysed as "quasi-ethnic communities" (Murray 1979), which have become institutionalised in the same processes as immigrant communities in the US. This work is sometimes directly in line with that of the Chicago School of the beginning of the 20th century: Park and Burgess in The City (La City), published in 1925, described the ; Unfinished manuscript/Manuscrit d'article non finalisé ; For English ...
BASE
In: Bulletin de la Classe des Sciences de l'Académie Royale de Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Band 9, Heft 7, S. 325-330
We give a detailed proof of an old result of N. Wallach and ourselves [1] which never appeared and which was asked by several colleagues in the last year.
In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 217-225
In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 816-823
Soit C une courbe voisine d'une courbe donnée C dans un espace riemannien à n dimensions, telle que le point P de C correspondant à un point quelconque P de C se trouve sur le vecteur unitaire ξ(3) de la seconde normale à C en P et à une distance infinitésimale ε de P. Soit ξ(3) le vecteur obtenu à partir du vecteur unitaire ξ(3) de la seconde normale à C en P en faisant subir à ce dernier un déplacement parallèle infinitésimal le long de ξ(3) jusqu'en P. On obtient n-2 conditions nécessaires et suffisantes pour que ξ'(3), coïncide avec ξ(3) au premier ordre près en ε.
ISSN: 1931-728X
In: Frankfurter wirtschafts- und sozialgeographische Schriften 72
International audience ; In prisons, sexual activities are officially forbidden, although sex is ubiquitous. If prison spaces are analyzed within a deterministic framework, they can be considered as generating sexual violence and/or favoring some sexual activities (as masturbation, use of pornographic materials, homosexuality) that would respond to the inmates' deprivation of hetero-sexual relationships. The authors, a sociologist and a geographer, question how space and sex interact in prison and show how prison various spaces are sexualized. They also investigate on how prison policies envision prison space as a way to control sexual activities. Hence, studying prison contributes to unveil gender roles representations that are not specific to the so-called prison subculture. ; La prison est un espace où les pratiques sexuelles sont formellement interdites. Pour autant, si on adopte la vision déterministe d'un espace producteur de pratiques sexuelles « de compensation » ou de « substitution » (masturbation, pornographie, homosexualité) ou encore producteur de violences à caractère sexuel, le sexe semble omniprésent dans l'espace carcéral. Les auteur-e-s, une sociologue et un géographe, interrogent l'articulation, en prison, du sexe et de l'espace. Ils soulignent comment certains espaces sont sexualisés et comment les politiques pénitentiaires, dans leurs déclinaisons spatiales, ont l'ambition de contrôler les pratiques sexuelles. La prison apparaît dès lors comme un excellent révélateur des représentations des rôles sociaux de sexe, largement partagées dehors.
BASE
International audience ; In prisons, sexual activities are officially forbidden, although sex is ubiquitous. If prison spaces are analyzed within a deterministic framework, they can be considered as generating sexual violence and/or favoring some sexual activities (as masturbation, use of pornographic materials, homosexuality) that would respond to the inmates' deprivation of hetero-sexual relationships. The authors, a sociologist and a geographer, question how space and sex interact in prison and show how prison various spaces are sexualized. They also investigate on how prison policies envision prison space as a way to control sexual activities. Hence, studying prison contributes to unveil gender roles representations that are not specific to the so-called prison subculture. ; La prison est un espace où les pratiques sexuelles sont formellement interdites. Pour autant, si on adopte la vision déterministe d'un espace producteur de pratiques sexuelles « de compensation » ou de « substitution » (masturbation, pornographie, homosexualité) ou encore producteur de violences à caractère sexuel, le sexe semble omniprésent dans l'espace carcéral. Les auteur-e-s, une sociologue et un géographe, interrogent l'articulation, en prison, du sexe et de l'espace. Ils soulignent comment certains espaces sont sexualisés et comment les politiques pénitentiaires, dans leurs déclinaisons spatiales, ont l'ambition de contrôler les pratiques sexuelles. La prison apparaît dès lors comme un excellent révélateur des représentations des rôles sociaux de sexe, largement partagées dehors.
BASE
International audience ; In prisons, sexual activities are officially forbidden, although sex is ubiquitous. If prison spaces are analyzed within a deterministic framework, they can be considered as generating sexual violence and/or favoring some sexual activities (as masturbation, use of pornographic materials, homosexuality) that would respond to the inmates' deprivation of hetero-sexual relationships. The authors, a sociologist and a geographer, question how space and sex interact in prison and show how prison various spaces are sexualized. They also investigate on how prison policies envision prison space as a way to control sexual activities. Hence, studying prison contributes to unveil gender roles representations that are not specific to the so-called prison subculture. ; La prison est un espace où les pratiques sexuelles sont formellement interdites. Pour autant, si on adopte la vision déterministe d'un espace producteur de pratiques sexuelles « de compensation » ou de « substitution » (masturbation, pornographie, homosexualité) ou encore producteur de violences à caractère sexuel, le sexe semble omniprésent dans l'espace carcéral. Les auteur-e-s, une sociologue et un géographe, interrogent l'articulation, en prison, du sexe et de l'espace. Ils soulignent comment certains espaces sont sexualisés et comment les politiques pénitentiaires, dans leurs déclinaisons spatiales, ont l'ambition de contrôler les pratiques sexuelles. La prison apparaît dès lors comme un excellent révélateur des représentations des rôles sociaux de sexe, largement partagées dehors.
BASE
In: Archipel, Band 86, Heft 1, S. 9-42
In Indonesia, polymusic – juxtaposed music – is performed during major ceremonies. Several groups play simultaneously, in the same space, but different tunes. If many tunes are performed at the same time in the same space, who can listen to them ? Seven cases of Indonesian polymusic, from South Sulawesi, West Kalimantan, and Bali, recorded between 1991 and 2001 are described : a Sa'dan Toraja funeral (pasonglo), house ceremony (bua' sangrapu), and trance ritual (maro pabalikan), a Dayak Taman ritual for the ancestors (gawai mamandung), a Balinese temple ceremony (odalan). The seven examples are compared through an analysis of space and time, in order to disclose their common aspects and relevant meanings. Polymusic presents the musicologist with a paradox of temporal and spatial perception. While assembling groups of singers at the same time and in the same space, these rituals prescribe their separation and individualization. The analysis of space and time points to a double perception : that of a differentiated and an undifferentiated world. This is translated on the acoustic level by the simultaneous juxtaposition and synthesis of different repertoires and different groups, which reveals – both sensorily and intellectually – either the groups' differences or the achievement of a macro-unity expressing the ritual expenditure.
In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, Band 40, Heft 1, S. 1058-1071
A space with which is associated a non-symmetric fundamental tensor gij has been termed «a generalised Riemannian space » by Eisenhart (1951). The object of this paper is to study the subspaces of a generalised Riemannian space.