Les événements des 20 et 21 Mars à Basse-Terre et leurs incidences Auteur(s) : Sainton, Jean-Pierre Année de publication : Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : Médiathèque Caraïbe Conseil Départemental de la Guadeloupe Université des Antilles. Service commun de la documentation Extrait de : "Mémoires générationnelles et histoire. L'année 1967" : conférences, les 31 mars et 28 avril 2017. Laméca Description : Jean-Pierre Sainton est professeur d'histoire contemporaine à l'Université des Antilles. Agé de 12 ans en 1967, il a traversé certains des faits de la période et connu plusieurs acteurs des événements. Il est aussi le fils d'un des principaux fondateurs du GONG qui fut parmi les 18 détenus et inculpés Guadeloupéens au Procès de Paris de février 1968. Aussi, il a longtemps porté cette période, d'abord en faisant partie de la première génération de jeunes militants issus de 1967, puis passeur de mémoire, et historien. Co-rédacteur du premier ouvrage de synthèse écrit en 1985 sur Mé 67, il n'a cessé de rechercher à mieux comprendre les faits. Il propose une approche renouvelée de ces événements sur lesquels se portent aujourd'hui de nouveaux regards : celui interrogateur des nouvelles générations de Guadeloupéens, comme celui de l'extérieur. Tous interpellent et demandent à comprendre. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 20 Droits : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/fichiers/V17085 V17085 | Partager |
Approche des phénomènes linguistiques en contextes sociodiglossiques Auteur(s) : Dispagne, Michel Année de publication : Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : CRILLASH : Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaires en Lettres, Langues, Arts et Sciences Humaines Extrait de : "Tracées de Jean Bernabé" : colloque international, du 25 au 27 octobre 2017. Université des Antilles Description : La présente communication est centrée sur la question de la langue et de sa pratique dans des espaces créolophones. Elle abordera dans le sillage des réflexions développées par Jean Bernabé dans son ouvrage fondateur Fondal-Natal, à travers la notion de « hiérarchisation des compétences » et de celle de « compétences linguistiques perforées », des éléments favorisant la visibilité et la singularité de l'identité créole du locuteur, sujet et acteur. Plus précisément, cette question langagière et culturelle, nous entendons l'inscrire par l'observation de faits indiquant sa complexité, d'autant que cette approche n'interroge pas un monolinguisme et sa pratique, ni un bilinguisme individuel réduit à la parlure de la langue mais plutôt un bilinguisme sociétal (John Gumperz, 1968) opérant à travers l'usage des pratiques collectives des deux langues, créole et français au sein de ces espaces où le code-switching est à l'oeuvre (Marielle Rispail, 2003). Droits : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/fichiers/V17248 V17248 | Partager |
Gaston Monnerville Extrait de : Manifestation organisée le 12 octobre 1937 en l'Honneur de M. Gaston Monnerville (début d'ouvrage) Résumé : Portrait photographique de Gaston Monnerville, né le 2 janvier 1897 à Cayenne (Guyane) et mort le 7 novembre 1991 à Paris. Avocat et homme d'État français, il fut notamment député, sous-secrétaire d'État aux Colonies, président du Conseil de la République de 1947 à 1958, puis du Sénat de 1958 à 1968. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 20 Droits : Domaine public Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/images/GAD120080001i1 GAD120080001i1 | Partager |
State of the Territory message of Governor ... to the ... Legislature of the Virgin Islands Auteur(s) : Virgin Islands of the United States -- Governor Éditeur(s) : s.n., s.n. s.n., s.n. ( St. Thomas, V.I.? ) Résumé : Description based on: 7th, regular session 1968 (Jan. 22, 1968); title from caption. United States Virgin Islands Virgin Islands of the United States Virgin Islands of the United States Virgin Islands of the United States 18954781 88645079 | Partager |
Je est un autre... Moi non plus ! Réflexions sur l'expérience amérindienne d'un prêtre breton Auteur(s) : Hupel, Erwan Année de publication : Loading the player... Éditeur(s) : Université de Guyane MINEA : Migrations, Interculturalité et Education en Amazonie Université Fédérale de l'Amapa Université Fédérale de Para Extrait de : "Littérature, patrimoine culturel et mémoire d'Amazonie" : colloque, les 14 et 15 novembre 2019. Université de Guyane Description : Erwan Hupel expose une analyse de l'Occident au prisme des Amériques à travers l'étude du récit d'un prêtre breton ayant officié au Pérou auprès des Quechuas de 1963 à 1968 puis de 1973 à 1979. Siècle(s) traité(s) : 20 Droits : CC-BY-NC-ND - Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification Permalien : http://www.manioc.org/fichiers/V20034 V20034 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00006 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00014 | Partager |
Annual report Auteur(s) : University of Nebraska (Lincoln campus) -- Mission in Colombia Instituto Colombiano Agropecuario Mid-America State Universities Association Éditeur(s) : The Mission The Mission ( [S.l.] ) Résumé : (Statement of Responsibility) The University of Nebraska Mission in Colombia. (Dates or Sequential Designation) Jan. 1, 1968-Dec. 31, 1968-1970. (Issuing Body) In cooperation with: Instituto Colombiano Agropecuario, Universidad Nacional de Colombia and The Mid America State Universities Association. Contracting agencies: United States Agency for International Development, The Ford Foundation and the Kellogg Foundation. (Funding) Electronic resources created as part of a prototype UF Institutional Repository and Faculty Papers project by the University of Florida. 03592262 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00052 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00047 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00049 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00012 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00037 | Partager |
"I Was Lord Kitchener's Valet" retail store in Barbados ; The Bryant Slides Collection ; The Bryant Slides Collection, Barbados Auteur(s) : Unknown ( Photographer ) Résumé : The slides were taken on collecting trips sponsored by the William L. Bryant Foundation, where books, music and art indigenous to the regions were gathered. They are organized by geographical location. People standing at the window of a retail store. This building’s walls feature 1960s inspired contemporary art paintings of flowers, text, and a stylized bird. Art paintings on the building’s walls include the following statements “I Was Lord Kitchener's Valet” and “Sock It to Me.” According to the Barbados Corporate Affairs and Intellectual Property Office (CAIPO), "I Was Lord Kitchener's Valet" was registered in Barbados on November 25, 1968. "I Was Lord Kitchener's Valet" was a boutique store in London during the 1960s, which sold secondhand uniforms and military memorabilia. This image also features the store’s memorable sign which was inspired by the famous 1914 military recruitment poster designed by Alfred Leete. The sign and poster features Lord Horatio Herbert Kitchener, then Secretary of State for War, pointing at the viewer with the words “Your Country Needs You.” However, this store's sign also features the Union Jack flag behind Lord Kitchener’s image. According CAIPO, The Bornn Bay Rum Co. was registered in Barbados on September 3, 1940. It was a subsidiary of the Bornn Distilling Co. of New York. Bay rum is a type of aftershave lotion made from bay leaves. Automobiles passes a Texaco sign along the street. Slide labeled Barbados Bldg. in Psychedelic Colors. Barbados -- Caribbean region Droits : All rights to images are held by the respective holding institution. This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. For permission to reproduce images and/or for copyright information contact Special Collections & University Archives, University of Central Florida Libraries, Orlando, FL 32816 phone (407) 823-2576, email: speccoll@ucf.edu CFM1972_01a Sheet 21: 3 http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019197/00001 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00062 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00005 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00050 | Partager |
Life in the yaguas, Photographs by Aida Garcia Alonso Auteur(s) : García Alonso, Aida Éditeur(s) : Aida García Alonso Aida García Alonso ( Habana, Cuba ) Résumé : (Acquisition) From private collection. (Biographical) Aida García Alonso was Cuban. She attended Mexico's National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH) where she got a degree in cultural anthropology. After the Cuban Revolution, García Alonso returned to Cuba. There she started to do ethnographic research in Las Yaguas, a series of slums in Havana. Her work coincided with the Cuban government's project of relocating Las Yaguas' dwellers to new houses built by the new regime. The result of her fieldwork was the book Manuela la Mexicana published by Casa de las Americas in 1968. In the 1970s, García Alonso was preparing a second edition. For this newer edition she prepared photographs and statistics on the people who used to live in Las Yaguas and was relocated. Fidel Castro's government censored the work, and García Alonso went into exile to Mexico in 1980, where she died in 2009. This digital collection includes the photographs, captions, and statistics that were to be included in the second edition of Manuela la Mexicana. Havana, Cuba Droits : Applicable rights reserved. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00019386/00011 | Partager |
Ramón Puig Auteur(s) : Reinke, Bill. ( Photographer ) Résumé : Photo date stamped on back: June 16, 1979. (Biographical) Tailor Ramón Puig, who was often referred to as “The King of the Guayaberas,” fled Cuba and settled in Miami in 1968. Forced to leave without any personal belongings, he returned to Cuba in the 1980s and retrieved them. Puig practiced his trade in South Florida until his passing in 2011. Miami, Florida Droits : All rights reserved by the source institution. 1995-277-17264 http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00015713/00001 | Partager |
Experimental study into the petrogenesis of crystal-rich basaltic to andesitic magmas at Arenal volcano Auteur(s) : Parat, Fleurice Streck, M. j. Holtz, F. Almeev, R. Auteurs secondaires : Géosciences Montpellier ; Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) - Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS) - Université de Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Manteau et Interfaces ; Géosciences Montpellier ; Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) - Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS) - Université de Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) - Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) - Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS) - Université de Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Portland State University [Portland] (PSU) Institut für Mineralogie, Leibniz Universität Hannover Éditeur(s) : HAL CCSD Springer Verlag (Germany) Springer Verlag Résumé : International audience Arenal volcano is nearly unique among arc volcanoes with its 42 year long (1968–2010) continuous, small-scale activity erupting compositionally monotonous basaltic andesites that also dominate the entire, ~7000 year long, eruptive history. Only mineral zoning records reveal that basaltic andesites are the result of complex, open-system processes deriving minerals from a variety of crystallization environments and including the episodic injections of basalt. The condition of the mafic input as well as the generation of crystal-rich basaltic andesites of the recent, 1968–2010, and earlier eruptions were addressed by an experimental study at 200 MPa, 900–1,050 °C, oxidizing and fluid-saturated conditions with various fluid compositions [H2O/(H2O + CO2) = 0.3–1]. Phase equilibria were determined using a phenocryst-poor (~3 vol%) Arenal-like basalt (50.5−wt% SiO2) from a nearby scoria cone containing olivine (Fo92), plagioclase (An86), clinopyroxene (Mg# = 82) and magnetite (Xulvö = 0.13). Experimental melts generally reproduce observed compositional trends among Arenal samples. Small differences between experimental melts and natural rocks can be explained by open-system processes. At low pressure (200 MPa), the mineral assemblage as well as the mineral compositions of the natural basalt were reproduced at 1,000 °C and high water activity. The residual melt at these conditions is basaltic andesitic (55 wt% SiO2) with 5 wt% H2O. The evolution to more evolved magmas observed at Arenal occurred under fluid-saturated conditions but variable fluid compositions. At 1,000 °C and 200 MPa, a decrease of water content by approximately 1 wt% induces significant changes of the mineral assemblage from olivine + clinopyroxene + plagioclase (5 wt% H2O in the melt) to clinopyroxene + plagioclase + orthopyroxene (4 wt% H2O in the melt). Both assemblages are observed in crystal-rich basalt (15 vol%) and basaltic andesites. Experimental data indicate that the lack of orthopyroxene and the presence of amphibole, also observed in basaltic andesitic tephra units, is due to crystallization at nearly water-saturated conditions and temperatures lower than 950 °C. The enigmatic two compositional groups previously known as low- and high-Al2O3 samples at Arenal volcano may be explained by low- and high-pressure crystallization, respectively. Using high-Al as signal of deeper crystallization, first magmas of the 1968–2010 eruption evolved deep in the crust and ascent was relatively fast leaving little time for significant compositional overprint by shallower level crystallization. ISSN: 0010-7999 hal-01115717 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01115717 DOI : 10.1007/s00410-014-1040-4 | Partager |