Academic literature on the topic 'Cartes – Dans la littérature pour la jeunesse'
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Journal articles on the topic "Cartes – Dans la littérature pour la jeunesse"
Hamel, Yan. "La guerre pour la jeunesse." Dossier 37, no. 2 (April 2, 2012): 83–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1008577ar.
Full textHenky, Danièle. "La réactivation du mythe du Déluge en littérature de jeunesse." Articles spéciaux 74, no. 1 (November 5, 2018): 23–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1053561ar.
Full textPochet, Sophie. "Quelles attitudes possèdent les futurs publicitaires envers la publicité et son éthique ? Analyse compréhensive des représentations sociales d’un corpus d’étudiants." Revue Communication & professionnalisation, no. 5 (December 5, 2017): 94–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.14428/rcompro.vi5.903.
Full textTarif, Julie. "« Traducteur pour la jeunesse : le beau rôle ? »." Convergences francophones 2, no. 2 (October 20, 2015): 44–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/cf305.
Full textL. Beckett, Sandra. "L'art des funambules: les albums pour tous des Éditions Ipomée." Ondina - Ondine, no. 3 (May 4, 2020): 209–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.26754/ojs_ondina/ond.201934421.
Full textAttikpoé, Kodjo. "La représentation du passé dans la littérature africaine pour la jeunesse." Nouveaux cahiers de la recherche en éducation 11, no. 2 (July 31, 2013): 151–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1017499ar.
Full textFournier, Michel. "Le développement de la littérature pour la jeunesse et l’affirmation de la culture moderne de la fiction au Québec." Étude 39, no. 1 (February 24, 2014): 121–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1022997ar.
Full textle Brun, Claire. "La littérature canadienne‑anglaise pour la jeunnesse en traduction québécoise : analyse discursive de la politique éditoriale et de la réception critique des « Deux Solitudes/Jeunesse » (1980-1992)." TTR : traduction, terminologie, rédaction 7, no. 1 (February 27, 2007): 153–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/037172ar.
Full textLe Brun, Claire. "Edgar Alain Campeau et les autres : le lecteur fictif dans la littérature québécoise pour la jeunesse (1986-1991)." Études 19, no. 1 (August 30, 2006): 151–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/201074ar.
Full textLe Brun, Claire. "Le roman pour la jeunesse au Québec. Sa place dans le champ littéraire." Globe 1, no. 2 (February 8, 2011): 45–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1000512ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Cartes – Dans la littérature pour la jeunesse"
Messing, Sabrina. "Rhétorique, esthétique et imaginaire de la carte en littérature de jeunesse : du fond Jeanne Cappe aux productions contemporaines." Thesis, Lille 3, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019LIL3H071.
Full textWhether it is thanks to novels, children’s picture books or comics, children’s literature readership is oftentimes presented maps that work as much as narrative spatializations as spatialised narrations. The examination of the Jeanne Cappe Collection, which gathers published works from the end of the 1940s to the mid-1970s, and the examination of contemporary productions, attest that maps travel across children’s literature’s history and genres.The synchronic and diachronic perspectives, as well as the literary and iconographic approaches, improved with geography, cartographic and art histories quotation, not only make it possible to create a cartography of the map in children’s literature, but also to try and single out its rhetorical, aesthetic and imaginary purposes.In the end, what does the literary map in children’s literature reveal and, on the contrary, what does children’s literature do to literary maps?The first chapter deals with the map’s educational function, discussing the transmission of geographic knowledge in several genres (school novels, atlas, travel stories, and adventure novels). The cartographic writing of the history is also studied, especially how children’s literature uses the map as a historical narrative device within historical novels, among other genres.The second chapter focuses on the map materiality, so as to highlight its connexion with cartography history and artistic cartography. Studying the map’s physical identity reveals how numerous are the interactions in which bodies and senses – the characters’, thanks to the cartographic experience dramatization – and the readers’, handling, manipulating and checking the map – and text-shaped system) are remarkably stirred.The third chapter analyses the map as translated into images, symbols, words or settings. Observing that the world is shaped into a kind of representation leads to question the very notion of verisimilitude and the use of the cartographic language in literary maps. It shows the way to examine the literary imaginary presence within the cartographic imaginary. The map turned into literature is eventually discussed as an expression of how literature expands onto the map territory.Being cross-disciplinary, the rhetorical, aesthetic and imaginary discussions are to be found in all of three chapters : for it deals with literary maps, the question of language – of languages, since they achieve the convergence of both the cartographic language and the literary language – is at the heart of interactions between discursive objectives, style, materiality and imaginary of the map
Elchawa, Abdudlayem. "La littérature pour la jeunesse dans le monde arabe." Paris 7, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991PA070077.
Full textThe arab military defeat of 1967 resulted in the emergence of a new type of children's literature in the arab world. The subject-matter of this literature is more topical, the sources more diversified, the themes more appealing, the form more modern, the substance richer. Hense the need for us to analyse its specific features. This investigation has made us aware of the necessity of throwing into relief the social conditions, the psycho-educational and aesthetic aspects which contribute to weaving a relation between discourse and society, author and child. The study of sources and themes has led us to identify the historical influences: the impact of islam, that of the nationalist ideologies and the values they propound as well as the social imperatives. Our research confirms the following hypothesis: children's literature is a literature made-to-measure. It further shows a discrepancy, a "lopsidedness" between the author's intention and the child's response. In order to circumvent censorship, the writer resorts to fantasy, to a symbolic bestiary or to an antropomorphic presentation of nature. As a conclusion we can venture the following exploration: besides its more overt and numerous objectives, arabic children's literature has been produced essentially for the purpose of giving a convenient alibi to authors. They entrust their readers with a mission which they, adults, have been unable to fulfil : i. E. Building up a great motherland and a new modern democratic arab society
Miskovsky, Isabelle. "La relation au lecteur dans le roman contemporain pour la jeunesse." Paris 10, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA100102.
Full textThe novel for young people has evolved since the 80ies toward a rich and complex relationship between the authors and their readers, perceptible in literary works. The ambivalent functions which have defined for long the specific novel style for young people, i. E. To untertain and to educate, are questioned nowadays. The writers are anxious to get away from a too simplistic reading agreement and to commit themselves to a wider social and artistic search concerning a larger audience. Starting from the two main objectives which however persist unsaid ( and which corresponde to the srong expectations of those who publish and prescribe). The thesis studies how the authors modify the rules of this style for young through subtle compromises and determined transgressions in order to make their own voice heard. .
Joselin, Laurence. "Les représentations du handicap dans la littérature de jeunesse française et italienne." Rouen, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008ROUEL634.
Full textThe research focuses on the social representations of the hero in a situation of handicap through the youth literature in France and in Italy (corpus of 100 contemporary illustrated albums or short novels). The point is to better assess the representations from two hypotheses : representations vary according to the type of the hero's deficiency, differences between French and Italian books may possibly be linked with the integration practices in these two countries. A thematic analysis, a discourse analysis via the Tropes software and an analysis of the cover's illustrations shed an additional methodological light on a corpus in youth literature. Deficiency constitues the main theme of the stories (unlike the iconographical representation where the deficiency is often suggested). The narrative aim is to modify the character's condition that go from an unsatisfactory situation to a familial or social integration. The results show the plural representations and the characteristic features of each deficiency : motor deficiency : super hero, « as everybody else » ; mental deficiency : kindness ; autism : violence ; visual deficiency : aggressiveness, sensorial substitute ; hearing deficiency : « as everybody else », sensorial substitute. The narrative threads reflect the choices of each of the countries (school integration, institution, deinstitutionalisation : in the French books, the progress ability of the hero owing to an appropriate rehabilitation ; in the Italian books, good feelings and intervention of the social group
Leduc, Michèle. "Le personnage autochtone dans la littérature québécoise pour la jeunesse (1996-2008)." Thesis, Université Laval, 2011. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2011/28227/28227.pdf.
Full textLacroix, Anna. "Le pessimisme en littérature pour la jeunesse : le cas des dystopies pour adolescents." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/33431.
Full textThis master’s thesis aims to analyse the pessimism in children’s literature, focussing particularly on its manifestation within dystopias for young adults. Children’s literature is traditionally regarded by many as an inherent optimist genre, as shown by the censorship to which it is regularly subjected, principally by the editorial process. In this context, it seems hard to explain the massive popularity wave that the dystopian novels for young adults experienced in the wake of the XXI century. This genre, displaying an usually futuristic fictional society in which evolves a character who suffers and who desires to revolt against it, is indeed characterized by a pronounced pessimism. This master’s thesis questions the way authors of dystopias for young adults harmonise the inherent optimism of children’s literature and the pessimism of the dystopian genre, while posing the hypothesis that the said pessimism is presented to the young target audience in a much attenuated state. A comparison between a corpus of novels intended to teenagers and another one that has an adult target audience was used in order to study our hypothesis within two main aspects, the character and the society, as well as other mitigating factors that can be seen throughout the book. We think these various elements all contribute to reduce the pessimism in dystopias for young adults by creating a familiar feeling for the readers and by lightening the burden that is resting on their shoulders and on those of the protagonists.
Derval, Danièle. "La famille dans les romans pour jeunes de 1860 à 1975." Bordeaux 3, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987BOR30005.
Full textAfter studying the main themes concerning the family and typical of the time dealt with as well as the psychological problem children are confronted with, it appears that the novels for the youth from 1860 to 1975 carry the aspirations and aims of the society which produced them as well as the change in the representation of the family
Desmaisons, Christiane. "Les séries policières dans la littérature enfantine et leur réception." Lyon 3, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987LYO31018.
Full textWhile children find the adventures of the five, the clan des sept, the six compagnons, fantomette, or another young detectives facinating, critics are often, despising such novels, not giving them even the title of books for the young. Everybody, it's true, doesn't expect from that lecture, the same thing. Adults, looking at these series with a realist view can but criticize their artificial surrondings, their temporal inaccuracy, their unlukely plots and about all their dull stereotyped characters. They are regreting that books give to their reader neither a reflection of the real world nor new knowledges. On the contrary, the children perceive the symbolism of the novels : their surronding, their components, their characters are familiar
Ventresque, Françoise. "L'amour dans les albums de littérature de jeunesse contemporaine (choix d’éditions)." Toulouse 2, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009TOU20026.
Full textChildren's literature, although considered for a long time as sub-literature, has, during recent decades, become emblematic of literature of quality. Picture books, which integrate both pictures and text to make sense, are one of its distinctive features. Within this production, we have chosen the theme of Love. This theme is seen as more innovative probably because it is linked to the evolutions of society. In this context, we have based our research on a selection of thirty or so contemporary picture books representative of all the productions from 1980 to 2009. In order to identify the main features of these productions, we have used a cross- analysis reviewing the various stages of love. All these analyses show, even demonstrate, the specificities and qualities reached in this literary genre, as well as the range of the themes approached. Indeed, we have observed that the combined talents of some authors and illustrators stand out in many ways on the levels of imagination as well as originality and humour, to such a degree that certain picture books can arouse the interest of grown-ups and children alike. This talent also shows in the way the themes are adapted, taking into account the constraints and regulations linked to the supposed age of the readers. Thus, it is interesting to note that almost all the themes of literature related to love are approached and that many sources of inspiration re-appear with them, whether it is tales, legends or ancient myths
Gobbé-Mévellec, Euriell. ""Habiter l'image" : jeux et enjeux du visuel dans l'album de jeunesse illustré et le théâtre jeune public contemporains en Espagne." Toulouse 2, 2010. https://acces.bibliotheque-diderot.fr/login?url=https://doi.org/10.15122/isbn.978-2-8124-2937-8.
Full textChildren's literature nowadays asserts the predominance of an iconic logic and clears away the former conception of the illustration subjected to the text. Today the whole book presents itself as a visual object and requires to be analyzed as such. This is no episodic characteristic, but rather a phenomenon to be linked with the evolution of media practices in the post-modern videosphere, and an echo of certain questionings in modern art. What are the direct consequences within the book of the several moving, multimedia and interactive images society targets at children? In becoming more and more aware of the psychological specificities of its readers, children's literature explores the ways to get an even more direct, immediate and attractive contact with children, re-using the modes of representation of other artistic fields, notably theater's apparatus. Picture books thus turn out to be a perfectly apt base to adjust to such alien apparatus and adapt it to their own codes, always highlighting the importance of communication. Their pages show the world to the children while mirroring their personal experience and emotions, and invite them to explore and people the image. The image thus becomes a mental landscape, a protective frame screening the relationship between the self and the world, and adapting its shape to the children. Paradoxically, the image is most visually powerful when its visibility is slightly altered and its own disappearance carefully staged. It thus gives birth to new forms of writing such as traces and clues, requiring great attention from the young investigator-reader
Books on the topic "Cartes – Dans la littérature pour la jeunesse"
Guerre et littérature de jeunesse (1913-1919): Analyse des dérives patriotiques dans les périodiques pour enfants. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2012.
Find full textPouliot, Suzanne. L' image de l'Autre: Une étude des romans de jeunesse parus au Québec de 1980 à 1990. Sherbrooke, Qué: Éditions du CRP, 1994.
Find full textillustrateur, Lemay Katy 1970, ed. Comment se faire des millions d'amis: Tout plein d'histoires vraies sur les histoires inventées. Montréal, Québec, Canada: Québec Amérique, 2014.
Find full textMartin, M. J. Julia Sneezer and the great day of events. [Thornton, Ont.]: Lion & Mouse Tales, 2009.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Cartes – Dans la littérature pour la jeunesse"
Boutevin, Christine. "Le poème et son illustration dans le recueil contemporain pour la jeunesse." In Littérature de jeunesse au présent, 187–202. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.34187.
Full textNicol, Françoise. "Métamorphoses de l'ogre dans la littérature pour la jeunesse." In Les pères en débat, 81–97. Érès, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eres.selle.2007.01.0081.
Full textMouloungui, Merveilles Léoncia, and Pauline Franchini. "Écrire l’esclavage pour les adultes et pour les jeunes : Maryse Condé et les enjeux d’une mixité éditoriale." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 61–73. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41219.
Full textPlissonneau, Gersende. "Écrire l’esclavage pour la jeunesse : de quelques albums iconotextuels." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 193–215. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41269.
Full textConnan-Pintado, Christiane, and Sylvie Lalagüe-Dulac. "À la recherche d’Edmond Albius, esclave réunionnais, « fantôme » de l’histoire." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 77–98. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41239.
Full textMesnard, Éric. "Les récits autobiographiques : une source pour écrire et transmettre l’histoire des esclaves." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 23–35. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41204.
Full textConnan-Pintado, Christiane. "Naître esclave et/ou métis." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 117–32. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41252.
Full textPlissonneau, Gersende. "Conclusion." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 217–21. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41274.
Full textRouvière, Nicolas. "L’esclavage et la traite dans la BD historique pour la jeunesse (1945-2020)." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 165–91. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41267.
Full textGennaï, Aldo. "Un cas de juvénilisation précoce : La Case de l’oncle Tom." In Écrire l’esclavage dans la littérature pour la jeunesse, 37–60. Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pub.41212.
Full textConference papers on the topic "Cartes – Dans la littérature pour la jeunesse"
Connan-Pintado, Christiane. "Métamorphoses d’une histoire d’eau en littérature de jeunesse (1865-2004) Perspectives scientifiques/ littéraires/pédagogiques." In XXV Coloquio AFUE. Palabras e imaginarios del agua. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/xxvcoloquioafue.2016.2489.
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