02478 am 2200517 n 450 9910495921003321201601202-271-09100-410.4000/books.editionscnrs.5573(CKB)4340000000012947(FrMaCLE)OB-editionscnrs-5573(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/84935(PPN)267943059(EXLCZ)99434000000001294720160701j|||||||| ||| 0freuu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLes arènes totalitaires Hitler, Mussolini et les jeux du stade /Daphné BolzParis CNRS Éditions20161 online resource (341 p.) Hors collection2-271-06635-2 À la fois fête des peuples et fête de la beauté, les Jeux olympiques de Berlin ont été immortalisés en 1936 par Leni Riefenstahl. Mais comment les « dieux du stade » ont-ils contribué à l’affirmation des nazis sur la scène internationale ? Et comment comprendre l’incroyable puissance fusionnelle de ces célébrations politico-sportives ? À partir d’archives inédites, Daphné Bolz montre comment les régimes d’Hitler et de Mussolini ont soumis le sport à leurs objectifs de propagande. L’architecture des stades fut mise au service d’un univers symbolique mêlant mythologie de l’Antiquité et signes de la modernité. Daphné Bolz décrypte les codes de cette esthétique destinée à mettre en scène le triomphe de l’Homme nouveau par et dans le combat sportif. Une étude ambitieuse qui éclaire la genèse de la « religion fasciste ».Fascism and sportsItalyHistoryNational socialism and sportsHistorySports and stateGermanyHistorySports and stateItalyHistoryJeux Olympiquesnational-socialismesportpolitiqueAllemagneItalieFascism and sportsHistory.National socialism and sportsHistory.Sports and stateHistory.Sports and stateHistory.Bolz Daphné1237376FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910495921003321Les arènes totalitaires2872429UNINA06186nam 22008772 450 991014181770332120230621141458.09781922064356 (ebook)9781922064349 (paperback)(CKB)2670000000410013(SSID)ssj0000894231(PQKBManifestationID)11488096(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000894231(PQKBWorkID)10835232(PQKB)11738704(UkCbUP)CR9781922064356(EXLCZ)9781922064356(WaSeSS)IndRDA00124704(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/36252(EXLCZ)99267000000041001320130326d2012|||| uy| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierImagining the future young Australians on sex, love and community /Chilla Bulbeck[electronic resource]University of Adelaide Press2012Adelaide :The University of Adelaide Press,2012.1 online resource (xi, 288 pages) digital, PDF file(s)Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Oct 2015).Print version: 9781922064349 Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction --Background to the research: 'The future is female' (is it?) --Methods --The questionnaire --Writing the future: imagined life stories --Outline of the book --1.Essaying difference: Comparing essays across the sub-samples --Introduction: 'Choice' or 'risk' biography? --Young women and their mothers: From caring for family to caring professions --Young men's and women's life stories compared --Young men: Cars and sports --Sex and love --Gendered career aspirations --The homosexual imaginary --Disadvantaged stories: No bridges from now to the future --Aboriginal youth: Family and politics --Young migrants' dreams --2.Learning from their parents: Inter-generational change and continuity --Narratives of becoming: Women change their lives (and minds) --Women's lives transformed by access to paid work --Psychic transformation --Men's disadvantage or opportunity? --Fathers grope for stories of moving masculinities --Sons deflect feminism in parodic masculinity --Girly girls and blokes: Young people's consciousness of gender performance choices --Feminism: Too far, too soon, too same --Gender inequality: All about male disadvantage --3.Emotional literacy and domestic relations --Emotional literacy: Crafting a choice biography in the company of others --'I am': Independent and interdependent? --Psychological capital --A meeting of minds? His and her imagined relationships --'Settling down': Breadwinning and childraising --The 'neo-traditional' family: A compromise between his and her relationships --Equality at the limits: Sharing the caring --Equality and egalitarianism in housework and childcare --Emotional literacy at the limits: Abortion decisions --Changing institutions as well as women's desires --4.Global visions and cramped horizons: Stories of class --The hidden injuries of class --Consuming class --The 'zombie' category of class --Addressing class differences: Abject social services recipients and the welfare state --Rejecting the social security subject position --The poor are always with us --'Education generation': Equality of opportunity? --Comparing educational pathways in the life stories --Young mothers becoming 'can-do' girls? --5.'Intimate' citizenship? --Playing at politics --Celanthropy: Money buys love --Planet earth needs our love and protection --Beyond 'yeah, whatever': The potential for individualised citizenship --Gender relations: 'my feminism' --Refugees: Good neighbours --Reconciliation: Us and them and its quotidian expression --Lacking sociological literacy in an age of individualism --Conclusion:Equality in the rhetoric, difference in reality --Appendixes --The questionnaires --The sample --Survey statistics.Imagining the Future explores our contemporary complex equality narrative through the desires and dreams of 1000 young Australians and 230 of their parents from diverse backgrounds across Australia. This extraordinary data set affords analysis of the impact of gender, socio-economic disadvantage, ethnicity, Aboriginality and sexuality on young peoples imagined life stories, or essays written about their future.YouthAustraliaAttitudesYouthSexual behaviorAustraliaYoung adultsAustraliaAttitudesYoung adultsSexual behaviorAustraliaYoung adultsAustraliaSocial conditionsYoung adultsAustraliaInterviewsTeenagersAustraliaConduct of lifeTeenagersAustraliaInterviewsAustraliaSocial life and customs21st centuryethnicityaboriginalityintergenerational comparisonsocio-economic disadvantageearly 21st australian societysexualitysocial relationsgenderAdelaideAdolescenceFemaleFeminismMiddle classPerthStudentWorking classYouthAttitudes.YouthSexual behaviorYoung adultsAttitudes.Young adultsSexual behaviorYoung adultsSocial conditions.Young adultsInterviews.TeenagersConduct of life.TeenagersInterviews.305.230994Bulbeck Chilla1951-801816University of Adelaide Press,UkCbUPUkCbUP9910141817703321Imagining the future2106448UNINA