NEWSLETTER
March 2023

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Call for papers

Study days: “Cities and universities: what heritage for what shared future?” - October 19-20, 2023, MSH Bordeaux.

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Master’s/ doctoral seminar remotely and face-to-face

Summer seminar "Constructions/imaginaries of race in the French-speaking world" organized with the support of the French-speaking Mobility Chair - May 15-June 30, 2023.

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Third category linguistic rights and duties:
between integration and diversity
Guest Professor: Giovanni Poggeschi, University Professor of Comparative Public Law Università del Salento, Lecce (Italy)
 
March 3 - 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
MSH Bordeaux Salle Jean Borde
 
Linguistic rights (and duties) fall into three categories. First category linguistic rights aim at integration: language is not a legal object to be protected but rather the instrument with which the exercise of fundamental rights is allowed, including to people who have a foreign language as their language. kindergarten...
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The human staged
Around the Dictionary of Humans (ed. M. Lequin and A. Piette, Presses universitaire de Paris Nanterre, 2022)
 
March 9 - 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
MSH Bordeaux Salle Jean Borde
 
What does the human being described by a philosopher like Seneca, by an anthropologist like Malinowski, by a sociologist like Tarde or even by a prehistorian like Leroi-Gourhan look like? What would an actor who had to play him do and what advice should the director give him to embody this theoretical human?  
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Engagement and distancing

What place for academic freedom

in human and social sciences

MSH Bordeaux interdisciplinary study day

 

March 23 - 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
MSH Bordeaux Salle Jean Borde
 
Historically, the legitimacy and validity of knowledge in the human and social sciences have been built through the development of methods based on a double principle of rationality and neutrality. Faced with this founding myth, epistemological work and critical studies have highlighted that neutrality is only illusory and that knowledge is always situated; if there is indeed objectivity in the human and social sciences, it is a constructed objectivity, conscious of the perspectives from which this knowledge was produced...
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Language policies (public and family)
through the prism of (multi)migrations
Adelina Miranda, professor of anthropology University of Poitiers/ UMR 7301 MIGRINTER Fellow IC Migrations
 
March 23 - 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
MSH Bordeaux Room 2

During this intervention, I propose to look at how migrations are accompanied by the development of a new linguistic register to define otherness and identities. From the study of a localized space (a town near Naples, Terzigno), I will question this question following two levels of analysis: intimate space and public space. The presence of badanti (care assistants for the elderly) has determined a redefinition of the emotional dimensions in family relationships and, consequently, the way of naming strangers...

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Decolonial and universal: crossed perspectives

Sophie Chave Dartoen, Amiria Salmond, Maori and decolonial ontology

Axis 2 “Inclusive societies”

March 23 - 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Sciences Po Bordeaux

This seminar of theoretical text readings is collegial. It will focus on contemporary thoughts on decoloniality, understood as a continuing process of removing coloniality from power. What universes, what stories, what epistemologies are being put in place to renew the question of the universal, of the too easily binary center/periphery relationship, of a possible outside of coloniality?
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Digital alternatives

Design Interaction Innovation Service study day

 

March 3 - 9 a.m.-12 p.m.

MSH Bordeaux Jean Borde Room

How durable are digital storage objects like our USB keys or our hard drives? What did we do with our mains hard drives or that lost USB stick? Our data is stored there temporarily or locked away forever, depending on a contemporary reading version and the proper functioning of the object. If we go back in time, the question arises since floppy disks and other obsolete storage media CR ROM, Blue ray, DVD, sound or video recording tape on cassette.

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Is the reader a reader like any other?

Gender and reception in contemporary French narrative 

PLURIELLES / IUF conference

 

March 16-17

MSH Bordeaux Jean Borde Room

How are female readers represented in contemporary literature? Whether they are fictional readers, who question the way in which the contemporary story addresses its recipients, or real readers, who demonstrate literate or ordinary reading practices, these figures construct and disseminate the image of women reading and writing. The persistent role of old stereotypes or, on the contrary, the political and emancipatory function of such representations constitute possible avenues of reflection, which invite us to think about reception through the prism of gender. ..

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Videos from the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme de Bordeaux are available on the Canal-U channel
 
MSH Bordeaux continues its commitment to open science by creating its video channel on Canal-U, the audiovisual platform for higher education and research. 19 videos are already accessible, others will gradually enrich the channel. They come from the presentation of projects supported by the MSHBx as part of its first AAP, from conferences or seminars and from meetings with researchers and teacher-researchers as well as with actors from civil society.

 

 
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> EDITORIAL NEWS

New publications Un@

Thibaud Constantin
Trans-Pyrenean cultures Ornaments from south-west France and north-west Spain in the Early Iron Age (8th-5th BC)
Ausonius Éditions - Collection "S@nté en contexts"

The result of thesis work, this work entitled "Trans-Pyrenean cultures: ornaments from south-west France and north-west Spain in the First Iron Age (8th-5th century BC)" is based on a corpus intended to be exhaustive, drawing on both old and recent data. The multiple analyzes developed make it possible to draw out a synthetic reflection with a historical aim on the wearers of regional ornaments and to understand the interactions between the populations settled on either side of the Pyrenees in the First Iron Age.

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Markus Schlicht, Aurélie Mounier, Maud Mulliez with the assistance of Pascal Mora and Romain Pacanowski
The colors of English alabaster panels. Medieval polychromy, production and perception
Ausonius Éditions – “PrimaLun@” collection
 
Between c. 1350 and 1550, English sculptors carved thousands of panels depicting religious scenes from alabaster quarries around Nottingham. Exported throughout Europe, these polychrome reliefs were originally often assembled to form altarpieces. Their colored epidermis, an integral part of these artworks, has now often disappeared. A multidisciplinary team (art historian, archaeologist, artist specializing in ancient polychromies, 3D engineers and optodigital researcher) has analyzed and reconstructed the polychromy of several of these English panels preserved in the Bordeaux region. The physico-chemical analyzes permitted to determine the nature of the materials employed and to recreate the paints used by the painters. These data served to produce an alabaster facsimile as well as three 3D models with their digital polychromy.
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