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Missions Chrétiennes N° 20 - décembre 2011 Le Dossier « Grands hommes et petites îles » : acteurs et actrices de la christianisation de l’Océanie (1580-1966) Dirigé par Claire Laux et Frédéric Anglviel, avec les contributions d’Annie Baert, Claire Laux, Yannick Essertel, Frédéric Angleviel, Sylvette Boubin-Boyer, Jean-François Zorn, Paul Fizin Magulue, Gilles Vidal et Michel Calvet. L’histoire religieuse des archipels du Pacifique est spécifique, du fait du long isolement de ce véritable sous-continent maritime et de la conversion de quasiment tous les Océaniens au christianisme entre 1797 et 1940. Ce dossier est dédié aux acteurs, tant européens qu’océaniens, de ...
L'histoire religieuse des archipels du Pacifique est spécifique, du fait du long isolement de ce véritable sous-continent maritime et de la conversion de quasiment tous les Océaniens au christianisme entre 1797 et 1940. Ce dossier est dédié aux acteurs, tant européens qu'océaniens, de l'évangélisation de ces lointaines régions antipodéennes : encore méconnus, ils méritent une place identique à celle des missionnaires de l'Afrique ou de l'Asie. Sous la direction de Claire Laux (Bordeaux 3) et Frédéric Angleviel (Nouvelle Calédonie), un bouquet de contributions portant sur des approches prosopographiques des groupes missionnaires en présence et de leurs actions marquantes, pr...
Les terres émergées de l'océan Pacifique furent parmi les dernières à connaître la rencontre entre des religions traditionnelles et le christianisme. Ce dossier propose une fresque des grandes questions qui interpellent tant les populations autochtones que les missionnaires. En parallèle à une approche géographique, les auteurs proposent un nouvel éclairage sur les thématiques telles que rivalités coloniales et rivalités missionnaires, conversions et premiers pas du clergé autochtone...
Written by the first Catholic missionaries to work in the western Pacific, the letters, were sent by the Marist missionaries back to the general administration of the Marist Fathers, based in Lyons, France. Transcribed by Charles Girard, a Marist Catholic priest, the records offer insights into the daily lives, cultures and beliefs of indigenous islanders, as well as the attitudes, challenges and experiences of the missionaries. The letters describe in extensive detail the way people lived and worked in New Zealand, New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia ,Wallis, Futuna, Tonga, Fiji and Samoa.
Written by the first Catholic missionaries to work in the western Pacific, the letters, were sent by the Marist missionaries back to the general administration of the Marist Fathers, based in Lyons, France. Transcribed by Charles Girard, a Marist Catholic priest, the records offer insights into the daily lives, cultures and beliefs of indigenous islanders, as well as the attitudes, challenges and experiences of the missionaries. The letters describe in extensive detail the way people lived and worked in New Zealand, New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia ,Wallis, Futuna, Tonga, Fiji and Samoa.
Written by the first Catholic missionaries to work in the western Pacific, the letters were sent by the Marist missionaries back to the general administration of the Marist Fathers, based in Lyons, France. Transcribed by Charles Girard, a Marist Catholic priest, the records offer insights into the daily lives, cultures and beliefs of indigenous islanders, as well as the attitudes, challenges and experiences of the missionaries. The letters describe in extensive detail the way people lived and worked in New Zealand, New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Wallis, Futuna, Tonga, Fiji and Samoa.
Depuis plusieurs décennies, l'histoire des missions chrétiennes s'est enrichie des apports et des concepts de l'anthropologie. Ce numéro s'interroge sur la manière dont les historiens des missions utilisent des concepts anthropologiques comme acculturation, syncrétisme, métissage...en prêtant attention à la complexité des phénomènes qu'ils recouvrent. La réflexion est largement centrée sur le Mexique de l'époque moderne(XVIè/XVIIès.)
Pauline is young and coquettish. She is also happily married to Marc and has a child. Gilles, kind and self-confident, is twenty years older and a recent divorcee. After he watches Pauline one morning, he asks to meet her. In spite of herself, Pauline agrees. Alice Ferney unfolds the next stages of the seduction in forensic detail and with devastating lucidity. As Pauline faces the possibility of an affair, she is thrown into confusion. Is she just feeling flattered because she is desired? Is she indulging in a fantasy version of love? Or could she have truly fallen for a stranger? We also eavesdrop on the lives of the people around Pauline and Gilles, from Pauline's adoring and unsuspecting husband, to Max and Eve's disintegrating marriage, to Penelope and her relationship with a man older than her father, and Laura, who desperately wants a child. Together, their stories make up a complete picture of the changing degrees of love.