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Debary, Octave
Résultat de la recherche
Muséographie du temps qui passe à propos d?une exposition réalisée avec le Musée d?Ethnographie de Neuchâtel
2006, Brand, Magdalena, Cereghetti, Sara, Conlon, Tiana, Debary, Octave, Merminod, Vanessa
Introduction au texte "le roi sans visage" - J. Bazin
2004, Debary, Octave
Patrimoines metisses. Contextes coloniaux et postcoloniaux - Laurier Turgeon
2003, Debary, Octave
Le tournant ontologique de la sociologie
1999, Debary, Octave, Tellier, Arnaud
Vietnam : photographies et éthique du souvenir
2005, Debary, Octave
Deindustrialization and museumification: From exhibited memory to forgotten history
2004, Debary, Octave
This ethnographic study of the creation of a museum in Le Creusot (France) provides an analysis of the heritage industry that emerged in the wake of the demise of a family company around which the town was built. This museum was a reaction to the passing of an age when industrial and urban environments were intrinsically linked. Through this description of how the past is collected and recollected in a museum, this article attempts to determine if this duty of remembrance is not, to a certain extent, a staging of history fading into oblivion-our society's sole response to industrial regeneration?
Les marchés de la mémoire: grande braderie de Lille et vide-greniers
2003, Debary, Octave, Tellier, Arnaud
Objets de peu, les marchés à réderies dans la Somme
2004, Debary, Octave, Tellier, Arnaud
This text analyzes, from an ethnographic standpoint, the way in which much less than redeties, markets much greater than local jumble sales - offer a collective means of recycling objects of little value. Having almost exhausted their practicality and become useless, they offer the possibility of historical redemption through the preservation of what must be safeguarded. Acquiring these objects implies a process of remembrance whereby history is sorted out, judged and written. Our debt towards history, embodied by these objects, can be construed as a necessary act of remembrance. (Trad. Andrew Gallix.)