Parutions (2017-2024) (2024)

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Résumé

"La décision de proposer un deuxième numéro «Variations» (en 2006, Clio. Histoire, Femmes et Sociétés publiait un numéro «Variations» sous la responsabilité éditoriale de Luc Capdevila) remonte à novembre 2021 lorsque Michelle Zancarini-Fournel constate que la revue accumule pour la rubrique varia un certain nombre d’articles portant sur la période contemporaine, unis par la thématique «Protester» qui se décline sur des aires géographiques variées. La plupart d’entre eux concernait les féminismes d’ici ou d’ailleurs, d’où le titre proposé: «Variations féministes». Parler de variations signifie à la fois constater la diversité spatiale et chronologique des formes de regroupement et d’organisation mais aussi prendre en compte les différents points de vue situés pour comprendre l’histoire des féminismes.

L’ensemble des huit articles de ce numéro reflète un paysage éditorial foisonnant autour de la thématique des protestations féministes. Certains, écrits par des jeunes historiennes, sociologues ou anthropologues, proposent des relectures de phénomènes historiques déjà étudiés mais en bousculent quelque peu les analyses en partant du point de vue des marges et en prenant en compte les perspectives transnationales et intersectionnelles." (Extrait de l'éditorial de Rebecca Rogers et Michelle Zancarini-Fournel).

En savoir plus

Sommaire

Éditorial : Rebecca Rogers, Michelle Zancarini-Fournel

Dossier

Page 15 à 38
Quand l’organisation municipale fait débat à la Wesleyan Female Educational Institution.
Freetown (Sierra Leone, 1883-1892)
, Odile Goerg

Page 39 à 58
Genre et idées politiques. Les ouvrières en grève en mai-juin 1917 en région parisienne, Léo Baccuet

Page 59 à 78
Un féminisme matérialiste italien à Padoue dans les années 1970, Andrea Martini

Page 79 à 102
« Soutien aux Trois Marias ! » Sociohistoire d’une mobilisation féministe internationale (1973-1974)
Maira Abreu, Adília Martins de Carvalho

Page 103 à 120
Un mouvement ou plusieurs ? Les féministes et l’intersectionnalité des luttes en Inde depuis les années 1970, Caroline Michon

Page 121 à 139
¡ Maestras ! « Femmes aux pantalons », des salles de classe aux barricades (Oaxaca, Mexique, 2006-2022), Julie Métais

Page 141 à 160
À la maison ou dans la rue. La place des femmes dans les générations « pro-vie » en Belgique (1968-2023), Anne-Sophie Crosetti

Archive

Page 161 à 194
Un entretien retrouvé de Natalie Zemon Davis dans la revue italienne Memoria (1983). Propos recueillis par Judy Coffin et Robert Harding (Radical Historical Review, 1980), Traduit de l’italien par Jean-Claude Zancarini

Portrait

Page 195 à 202
Françoise Basch (1930-2023). Pionnière et passeuse des études féministes, Comité de rédaction de Clio. FGH

Clio a lu « Variations féministes »

Page 203 à 207
Caroline Fayolle & Isabelle Matamoros (dir.), « Féministes en révolution (XIXe siècle, Europe-Amériques) », Revue d’histoire du XIXe siècle, 2023, 66/1.
Florence Rochefort

Page 207 à 210
Natacha Chetcuti-Osorovitz & Sandrine Sanos (dir.), Le Genre carcéral. Pouvoir disciplinaire, agentivité et expériences de la prison du XIXe au XXIe siècle, Gif-sur-Yvette, Éditions des maisons des sciences de l’homme associées, 2022, 297 p.
Michelle Zancarini-Fournel

Page 210 à 213
Robert Mencherini, avec la participation d’Ann Blanchet, Berty Albrecht. De Marseille au Mont Valérien. Une féministe dans la Résistance, Marseille, Gaussen, 2022, 223 p.
Michelle Zancarini-Fournel

Page 213 à 216
Christine Bard, Pauline Boivineau, Marion Charpenel, Bénédicte Grailles & Audrey Lasserre (dir.), Les Féministes et leurs archives, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes, collection Archives du féminisme, 2023, 265 p.
Michelle Zancarini-Fournel

Page 216 à 219
Alice Romerio, Le Travail féministe. Le militantisme au Planning familial à l’épreuve de sa professionnalisation, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2022, 256 p.
Amélie Nuq

Page 219 à 222
Delphine Lacombe, Violences contre les femmes. De la révolution aux pactes pour le pouvoir (Nicaragua, 1979-2008), Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2022, 306 p.
Alethia Fernández de la Reguera Ahedo

Page 222 à 224
Sylvie Chaperon & Odile Fillod, Idées reçues sur le cl*tor*s. Histoire et anatomie politique d’un organe méconnu, Paris, Le Cavalier bleu, 2022, 140 p.
Bibia Pavard

Page 224 à 228
Chowra Makaremi, Femme ! Vie ! Liberté ! Échos d’un soulèvement révolutionnaire en Iran, Paris, La Découverte, 2023, coll. Cahiers libres, 352 p.
Michelle Zancarini-Fournel

Page 229 à 231
Catherine Larrère, L’Écoféminisme, Paris, La Découverte, coll. Repères, 2023, 123 p.
Michelle Zancarini-Fournel

Comptes rendus divers

Page 233 à 236
Mélanie Traversier, L’Harmonica de verre et Miss Davies. Essai sur la mécanique du succès au siècle des Lumières, Paris, Le Seuil, 2021, 504 p.
Meghan K. Roberts

Page 236 à 239
Patrick Farges, Le Muscle et l’esprit. Masculinités germano-juives dans la post-migration : le cas des yekkes en Palestine/Israël après 1933, Bruxelles, Peter Lang, 2020, 370 p.
Yann Scioldo-Zürcher

Page 239 à 241
Marie Garrau & Michaëlle Provost (dir.), Expériences vécues du genre et de la race. Pour une phénoménologie critique, Paris, Éditions de la Sorbonne, Coll. « Philosophies pratiques », Paris, 2022, 228 p.
Claude Gautier

Page 243
Clio a reçu

Parutions (2017-2024) (2024)

FAQs

Was the 2024 eclipse darker than 2017? ›

Viewers of the total solar eclipse will experience a more prolonged period of darkness than in 2017. The totality of the solar eclipse lasts longer along the center of the path and for shorter periods closer to the edge of the path.

What is the spiritual meaning of the solar eclipse in 2024? ›

The darkness of the solar eclipse encourages introspection. It's a time to pause and reflect on one's life direction, contemplate deep desires, and acknowledge aspects of life that may need transformation. Meditation or mindfulness practices during this time can lead to deep insights and heightened self-awareness.

What's so different about this solar eclipse in 2024? ›

Why was the 2024 total solar eclipse so special? The 2024 total solar eclipse was a major event. Totality could last twice as long as in 2017, depending on the observer's location. It was also the longest totality on land for over a decade, so eclipse-chasers from around the world flocked to the path of totality.

Where will the April 8, 2024 eclipse be visible? ›

The April 8, 2024, total solar eclipse will enter the United States in Texas, and will travel through Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.

Why is the 2017 solar eclipse so special? ›

The August 2017 eclipse was the first with a path of totality crossing the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of the U.S. since the solar eclipse of 1918. Also, its path of totality made landfall exclusively within the United States, making it the first such eclipse since the country's declaration of independence in 1776.

Where is the point of the greatest eclipse in 2024? ›

The 2024 total eclipse path through Durango

The town of Nazas lies almost exactly on centerline, and is the nearest place to the point of greatest eclipse! This means that folks there will see 4m 27s of totality – the longest possible for this eclipse – just after 11:15MST.

Was there an eclipse when Jesus died? ›

It was now about noon, and darkness came over the whole land [or, earth] until three in the afternoon, while the sun's light failed [or, the sun was eclipsed]; and the curtain of the temple was torn in two. It appears that Luke may have originally explained the event as a miraculous solar eclipse.

What does the Bible say about the eclipse? ›

Joel 2:31 Prophecy and Omens

The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and terrible day of the LORD come.” This passage appears to refer to both a solar eclipse (sun turned into darkness) and a lunar eclipse (moon turned into blood).

What will happen on April 8, 2024? ›

The April 8, 2024, total solar eclipse began over the South Pacific Ocean and crossed North America, passing over Mexico, the United States, and Canada. Weather permitting, the first location in continental North America that experienced totality was Mexico's Pacific coast at around 11:07 a.m. PDT.

What eclipse happens every 100 years? ›

In any given location on Earth, a total eclipse happens only once every hundred years or so, though for selected locations they can occur as little as a few years apart. An example is the August 21, 2017 and April 8, 2024 eclipses, which will be viewed at the same spot near Carbondale, Illinois.

What eclipse happens every 9 years? ›

In a Saros Series, exactly 9 years, 5.5 days after any lunar eclipse, a solar eclipse will occur, and vice versa.

How long will the 2024 eclipse last? ›

These are the stages of a total solar eclipse. The partial phases last about an hour and 20 minutes. The next total solar eclipse to visit North America will be April 8, 2024. The duration of totality will be up to 4 minutes and 27 seconds, almost double that of The Great American Eclipse of August 21, 2017.

What precautions should be taken during solar eclipse 2024? ›

NASA offers these safety tips for the 2024 Solar Eclipse: Do not look directly at the sun. Solar filters, or eclipse glasses, provide the only safe way to look directly at a partial or total eclipse. Make sure they meet the ISO 12312-2 international standard.

Where is the best place in the US to see the total eclipse 2024? ›

Burlington is among the best places for those in the region to travel to, as it will experience 3 minutes and 19 seconds of darkness, starting at 3:26 p.m. Maine is the northern most place in the United States to see the total eclipse in 2024, also making it the last place in the country to experience totality.

What is the path of the eclipse in April 4 2024? ›

Where is the solar eclipse path of totality? The eclipse will sweep across the United States from Texas to Maine, passing through several major cities, including Dallas, Little Rock, Indianapolis, Cleveland, Buffalo and Burlington, Vt.

How dark will it be during the eclipse in 2024? ›

The sky will become dark, as if it were dawn or dusk. Weather permitting, people along the path of totality will see the Sun's corona, or outer atmosphere, which is usually obscured by the bright face of the Sun.

Why didn't it get dark during the eclipse? ›

When the moon covers the last 0.1% of the sun, the light levels will drop by about 1,000 times. That's why being in the path is so, so important. Outside of the path of totality, a partial solar eclipse will be seen—and it won't get dark.

What is the intersection of the 2017 eclipse and the 2024 eclipse? ›

The exact point place where the 2017 and 2024 Lines of Totality cross is Cedar Lake in Jackson County, just south of Carbondale.

What is the rarest eclipse to happen? ›

A hybrid solar eclipse — the rarest type of solar eclipse — is witnessed when an eclipse shifts between annular and total as the shadow of the Moon moves across the globe.

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