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Le témoignage bouleversant de la famille Morinière après la mort soudaine de l'aînée des enfants, Sophie 21 ans, dans un dramatique accident de la route en Guyane, alors qu'elle se rendait aux JMJ de Rio durant l'été 2013. 17 juillet 2013. Le deuil foudroie la famille Morinière. Sur une route de Guyane, Sophie, l'aînée des quatre enfants, meurt à 21 ans dans un accident de car alors qu'elle se rendait aux JMJ de Rio. Pour ses parents, François et Béatrice, ses deux frères et sa soeur, commence alors un long chemin de reconstruction personnel et familial, pour arriver à vivre avec l'inacceptable. Ils racontent leur parcours émotionnel, spirituel et social depuis l'accident, sa...
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Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist Mission, and French Catholic Reform offers a major re-assessment of the thought and activities of the most famous figure of the seventeenth-century French Catholic Reformation, Vincent de Paul. Confronting traditional explanations for de Paul's prominence in the devot reform movement that emerged in the wake of the Wars of Religion, the volume explores how he turned a personal vocational desire to evangelize the rural poor of France into a congregation of secular missionaries, known as the Congregation of the Mission or the Lazarists, with three inter-related strands of pastoral responsibility: the delivery of missions, the formation and training of clergy, and ...
Based on two international conferences held at Cornell University and the Freie Universität of Berlin in 2010 and 2015, this volume is the first ever to explicitly address the destruction of plaster cast collections of ancient Mediterranean and Western sculpture. Focusing on Europe, the Americas, and Japan, art historians, archaeologists and a literary scholar discuss how different museum and academic traditions – national as well as disciplinary –, notions of value and authenticity, or colonialism impacted the fate of collections. The texts offer detailed documentation of degrees of destruction by spectacular acts of defacement, demolition, discarding, or neglect. They also shed light on the accompanying discourses regarding aesthetic ideals, political ideologies, educational and scholarly practices, or race. With destruction being understood as a critical part of reception, the histories of cast collections defy the traditional, homogenous narrative of rise and decline. Their diverse histories provide critical evidence for rethinking the use and display of plaster cast collections in the contemporary moment.
First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.