The genocide against the Tutsi, and the Rwandan churches: between grief and denial
In: Religion in transforming Africa 9
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In: Religion in transforming Africa 9
In: Société
In: Sociétés: revue des sciences humaines et sociales, Band 154, Heft 4, S. 51-64
ISSN: 1782-155X
L'engouement qu'ont rencontré The Paradise et Mr Selfridge , deux séries télévisuelles se rapportant à l'avènement des grands magasins, premier symbole d'une démocratisation du luxe moderne, soulève une interrogation quant à savoir si elles ont comblé autant les attentes et les désirs des propriétaires de ces établissements que ceux du public. En effet, si dans la société hypermoderne une valorisation du passé par la nostalgie se développe, ce qui fait apparaître des liens entre l'ancien et l'actuel, cette réflexion permet de questionner la mise en relief dans ces séries des valeurs qui ont permis la montée de la bourgeoisie et des capitaux qui la caractérisent, tout en offrant une part de rêves. Ainsi, cet article cherche à démontrer que ces éléments sont toujours au centre des préoccupations sociales, d'où leur mise en relief au gré des épisodes.
In: Projet: civilisation, travail, économie, Band 382, Heft 3, S. 82-85
ISSN: 2108-6648
In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions: ASSR, Heft 183, S. 287-307
ISSN: 1777-5825
In: European Review of Private Law, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 101-108
ISSN: 0928-9801
This paper examines the representations and emotions associated with disclosure and stigma in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, seven years after the start of the South African government's ARV roll-out programme on the basis of in-depth oral history interviews of HIV-positive support group members. It argues that the wider availability of ARV treatment, the ensuing reduced fatality rate and the increased number of people, including men, who receive counselling and testing, may mean that HIV/AIDS is less stigmatised and that disclosure has become easier. This does not mean that stigma has disappeared and that the confusion created by competing world-views and belief systems has dissipated. Yet the situation of extreme denial and ideological confusion observed, for example, by Deborah Posel and her colleagues in 2003 and 2004 in the Mpumalanga province seems to have lessened. The interviews hint at the possibility that people living with HIV may have, more than a decade before, a language to express the emotions and feelings associated with HIV/AIDS. They were also found to be more assertive in matters of gender relations. These new attitudes would make disclosure easier and stigma more likely to recede.
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In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions: ASSR, Heft 164, S. 43-58
ISSN: 1777-5825
In: Bulletin de la Classe des lettres et des sciences morales et politiques, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 75-87
In: Refo500 Academic Studies (R5AS) Band 062
In 1611 Edmond Richer, the syndic of the Faculty of Theology of Paris, published a short but incisive defence of the conciliarist doctrine under the title De ecclesiastica et politica potestate. He claimed that this doctrine had been almost uninterruptedly followed by the University of the Paris since the time of the Council of Constance in the early 15th century. Within two years, at least six Latin, French or bilingual editions of the treatise saw the light as well as an English and a Dutch translation. The book was condemned at a meeting of the French bishops in March 1612 and its author was dismissed from his position of syndic of the Faculty of Theology a few months later. He withdrew from public life but remained influential. He continued to write in defence of the conciliarist doctrine and the so-called liberties of the Gallican Church until his death in 1631. He vehemently opposed Cardinal Bellarmine's doctrine of the indirect power of popes in temporal matters but never subscribed to the doctrine of the divine power of kings. Most of his books were published posthumously.Philippe Denis retraces Edmond Richer's career and examines his ecclesiological and political thinking. Without taking all the syndic's opinions at face value, this volume commits itself to taking seriously Richer's declared intention, which was to vindicate the teaching of the School of Paris and that of Jean Gerson in particular. Philippe Denis places the heated, sometimes aggressive, debates between Richer and his adversaries in the context of a double progression: that of the doctrine of an absolute monarchy, a form of government which had been developing since the troubles of the League, and that of the Ultramontane ideas, often disputed but supported with growing vigour, in France and elsewhere, in the context of the reception of the Council of Trent.Philippe Denis presents the English translation of his book originally published in French (Editions du Cerf in Paris, 2014).
In: Espace Afrique 6
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