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    <title>Cités | Cairn.info</title>
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    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:rss/revue/E_CITE</id>
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    <updated>2026-01-19T00:00:00+01:00</updated>

                <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_104</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The ravages of social media
                    | Cités
            (2025/4 n° 104)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2025-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-12-29T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2026-01-19T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 16| Introduction
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 22| The “voice of the people”: populism, language games and viral
performativity on social media
                                            |  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 23 to 31| The “netman”, child of the supersocial: on the fragilisation of the
psychosocial structure
                                            |  Pierre Beckouche
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 38| The phantoms of cyberspace
                                            |  Christian Walter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 46| The Tantalus syndrome, or the infinite extension of aspirations
                                            |  Gérald Bronner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 56| We are not educating our children, pornography is doing it for us
                                            |  Israël Nisand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 57 to 66| Medical obscurantism in the time of algorithms: issues, corruptions
and resistances
                                            |  Lonni Besançon,  Alexander Samuel,  Séverine Halimi-Falkowicz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 76| Mental health disinformation on social media
                                            |  Erell Guégan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 83| Do trans activist networks function like cults?
                                            |  Thierry Lamote
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 93| When social media promote conspiracy theories
                                            |  Arnaud Mercier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 102| Far right influence in IT, particularly social media: the use of AI
                                            |  Juliette Grange
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 111| Extremist schemes and narratives on social media, interview with
Valérie Kokoszka
                                            |  Laurence Bindner,  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 122| Jihadism and social media, interview with Nathalie Heinich
                                            |  Hugo Micheron,  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 130| Abuses of free speech committed on social media
                                            |  Evan Raschel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 139| Social media and child protection: legal resources
                                            |  Olivia Sarton
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 148| AI support of social media, interview with Valérie Kokoszka
                                            |  François Rastier,  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 157| About <i>The Social Dilemma</i>
                                            |  Gloria Origgi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 163| Introduction
                                            |  Paul Audi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 171| Keep your head down and hide
                                            |  Stephen Greenblatt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 195| Universities and America
                                            |  Jeremy Adelman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 199 to 208| Why do they hate France so much? Reasons for the passion of
Francophobia
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_103</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Why continue to learn? The era of relativism and Ai
                    | Cités
            (2025/3 n° 103)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2025-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-10-20T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-10-30T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 1 to 2| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 17| Introduction
                                            |  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 31| The world of information or the end of learning
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 45| Scientific knowledge as general knowledge. Why should science
permeate us all, and how can this be achieved?
                                            |  Yann Vaills
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 58| From tool to tutelage: learning in the era of machine learning
                                            |  Marius Bertolucci,  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 72| Senso-motor experience, a basic component of learning
                                            |  David Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 87| The untimely actuality of the Bildung in a “learning society”
                                            |  Quentin Landenne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 105| What good is moral education?
                                            |  Marie Thomas,  Vincent Vabois
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 110| Introduction
                                            |  Éric Pommier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 111 to 116| The Chilean revolt of 2019 and the first constitutional referendum
of 2022: retrospect
                                            |  Emmanuelle Barozet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 122| A “constitutive process” confiscated by parliament
                                            |  Pierre Dardot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 128| Unfinished spring: Chile and the environmental question (2019-2024)
                                            |  Ezio Costa Cordella
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 133| The Allende enigma, 50 years on
                                            |  Daniel Mansuy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 151| A political issue in ecological transition: consecrating the social
function of property
                                            |  Patrick Vieu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 166| On “deconstruction” in studies of Islam, and the Brandolini
principle
                                            |  Florence Bergeaud-Blackler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 167 to 169| Bruce Ackerman and James S. Fishkin, <i>Éveiller la raison
publique. Pour une journée de la délibération</i> [original title:
<i>Deliberation Day</i>]. Translated and introduced by Emmanuel
Nal, Paris, Vrin, coll.&#160;“L’esprit des lois”, 2024
                                            |  Pierre-Henri Tavoillot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 169 to 171| Vanessa Nurock, <i>Quelle éthique pour les nouvelles
technologies&#160;? Nanotechnologies, cybernétiques, intelligence
artificielle</i>, Paris, Vrin, 2024
                                            |  Christina Kalogeropoulou
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 172 to 176| Éric Brian, <i>Pour en finir avec l’ivresse de l’abstraction
numérique. Chiffres, statistiques, data</i>, Paris, Classiques
Garnier, 2025
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Cléro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 176 to 178| François Dosse, <i>Michel Serres, la joie de savoir</i>, Paris,
Plon, 2024
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 179| Alexeï Navalny, <i>Patriote. Mémoires</i> [<i>Patriot: A
Memoir</i>], Paris, Robert Laffont, 2024
                                            |  Michel Messu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 180 to 181| Luc Rouban, <i>Les Racines sociales de la violence politique</i>,
La Tour-d’Aigues, Éditions de l’Aube, 2024
                                            |  Michel Messu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 192| Back matter
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_102</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Philosophers in the Resistance
                    | Cités
            (2025/2 N° 102)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2025-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-08-04T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-08-26T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Ce numéro sera consacré à plusieurs philosophes engagés à
différents degrés dans la résistance – on ne pourra pas être
exhaustif malheureusement à cet égard. Mais il importe de pouvoir
faire ressortir soit les points d’appui intellectuels de la
résistance des philosophes (ainsi pour Cavaillès, Canguilhem par
exemple), soit les rapports entre une pensée politique et une
application consécutive de l’engagement, soit une éthique
susceptible d’orienter l’action vers la résistance (Jankélévitch),
ou bien encore une condition ontologique prompte à déterminer une
résistance clandestine (par exemple pour l’article sur la pensée
juive).</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 5| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 12| Introduction
                                            |  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 20| Jean Cavaillès: the necessity of action
                                            |  Romain Peter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 33| Georges Canguilhem: epistemological resistance. Cohesion between
concept and life
                                            |  Pierre Frédéric Daled
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 51| Democracy and Resistance: Cornelius Castoriadis and Claude Lefort
                                            |  Nicolas Poirier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 66| Vladimir Jankélévitch, the drama of the Resistance
                                            |  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 78| Simone Weil or resistance “on multiple levels”
                                            |  Emmanuel Gabellieri
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 87| Jewish thought put to the test in the barn. Physical survival and
reinvention of Judaism in occupied France
                                            |  Johanna Lehr
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 108| Refusing servitude: Jean Guéhenno, philosopher and resistance
fighter, versus Jean-Paul Sartre
                                            |  Emmanuel Faye
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 117| Albert Camus. Memories of the Resistance in <i>Actuelles IV</i>,
the rediscovered book
                                            |  Vincent Duclert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 122| Introduction
                                            |  Ghislain Deslandes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 127| The debate on public debt
                                            |  Dominique Plihon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 135| The usefulness and dangers of public debt
                                            |  Henri Sterdyniak
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 141| Considerations on public debt
                                            |  Jean-Marc Daniel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 147| The existential dimension of debt
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 152| Introduction
                                            |  Emmanuel Faye,  Denis Trierweiler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 173| Jean-Pierre Faye: a century of thought
                                            |  Emmanuel Faye
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 179| Jean-Pierre Faye, reader of Carl Schmitt
                                            |  Denis Trierweiler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 212| A strategy of self-exoneration: the correspondence between
Jean-Pierre Faye and Carl Schmitt on the total state
                                            |  Emmanuel Faye
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_101</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Raymond Aron or freedom of thought
                    | Cités
            (2025/1 N° 101)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2025-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-02-20T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-04-14T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 5| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 10| Introduction
                                            |  Perrine Simon-Nahum
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 23| Historical conscience and political concern. Raymond Aron’s
critique of Léon Brunschvicg and Alain
                                            |  Anthony Dekhil
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 34| How Aron writes history
                                            |  Pierre Manent
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 45| Raymond Aron and economy
                                            |  Maximilien Radvansky
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 60| Aron vs. neoliberalism
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 80| Raymond Aron the committed strategist
                                            |  Nicolas Baverez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 91| Raymond Aron, thinker of democracy
                                            |  Philippe Raynaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 101| Aron, unusual thinker of 20th century history
                                            |  Perrine Simon-Nahum
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 126| Avoidable tragedy: for a secular view of Sophocles’ <i>Antigone</i>
                                            |  Benjamin Germann,  Pierre Soubias
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 140| Social media: new crucibles of populist discourse
                                            |  Patrice Vibert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 143| Alain Badiou, <i>Mémoires d’outre-politique (1937-1985)</i>, Paris,
Flammarion, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 144 to 145| Isabelle Krier, <i>Marie de Gournay, philosophe morale et politique
à l’aube du XVII<sup>e</sup>&#160;siècle</i>, Paris, Classiques
Garnier, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 147| Éloi Laurent, <i>Économie pour le XIX<sup>e</sup>&#160;siècle.
Manuel des transitions justes</i>, Paris, La Découverte, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 148 to 149| Isabelle Aubert and Eva Debray (eds.), <i>Niklas Luhmann. Une
théorie générale de la société</i>, Paris, Éditions de la Sorbonne,
2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 150| Gérard Raulet, <i>L’Éducation selon Schiller</i>, Paris, ENS
Éditions, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 154| Nicole Malinconi, <i>Bruits du dehors</i>, Paris, Éditions de
l’insu, 2024
                                            |  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 154 to 164| Richar Wolin, <i>Heidegger in Ruins</i>. <i>Between Philosophy and
Ideology</i>, New Haven/Londres, Yale University Press, 2023
                                            |  Emmanuel Faye
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 167| Alain Boyer, <i>Karl&#160;Marx</i>. <i>La transparence et les
entraves. Une lecture critique</i>, Paris/Québec, Vrin/Presses de
l’Université Laval, 2024
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 167 to 169| Herbert Marcuse,<i>Dialectique de la civilisation. Marxisme,
psychanalyse, critique sociale</i>. <i>Textes et interventions
1954-1978</i>, trans. Fabien Ollier, Alboussière, QS? Éditions,
2024
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 170 to 171| Isabelle Barbéris, <i>Censures silencieuses</i>, Paris, Puf, 2024
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 172| Paul Audi, <i>Tenir tête</i>, Paris, Éditions Stock, 2024
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 173| Frédéric Worms, <i>Le Pourquoi du comment. Philosophie pour mieux
vivre</i>, Paris, Flammarion, 2024
                                            |  Emmanuel Picavet
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_100</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Saving democracy in a dangerous world
                    | Cités
            (2024/4 No 100)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[25th anniversary special issue]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2024-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-01-06T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-01-10T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages I to II| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 1 to 1| Tribute
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 14| General introduction
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 20| Introduction
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 32| What contemporaneity does to culture: the return of the Magic
Roundabout in an Olympic summer
                                            |  Pierre Statius
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 44| Authority in democratic crisis
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Lebrun
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 56| Conflicts in education
                                            |  Iannis Roder
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 57 to 67| The six struggles of secularism
                                            |  Pierre-Henri Tavoillot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 77| The new inclusive school, a total institution
                                            |  Isabelle de Mecquenem
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 87| Woke crusades and islamo-leftist indoctrination at university
                                            |  Pierre-André Taguieff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 97| Wokism and social media, new threats to education
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 104| Introduction
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 125| Inequalities are within generations, not between them
                                            |  Hippolyte d’Albis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 141| Democracy, conflictuality and ecological alternatives
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 149| Protecting democracy from itself
                                            |  Dominique Schnapper
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 161| What constitution is needed for a democratic balance of powers?
                                            |  Dominique Rousseau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 173| The National Rally and democracy
                                            |  Marc Lazar
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 180| Introduction
                                            |  Michel Messu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 190| France: the dangerous temptation of denial
                                            |  Georges Bensoussan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 201| Political violence and the strategy of chaos: the radicalisation of
democracy according to France Unbowed
                                            |  Alain Laquièze
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 211| A party of “wickedness”
                                            |  Gérard Bensussan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 213 to 222| The call to violence: social media and far-right activism
                                            |  Juliette Grange
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 223 to 233| Violence in the city: is there a way out of the current impasse?
                                            |  Maurice Berger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 235 to 246| Mafia clientism and drug-trafficking, liaisons dangereuses
                                            |  Eve Szeftel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 247 to 256| Anger in the city
                                            |  Michel Erman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 259 to 261| Introduction
                                            |  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 263 to 273| Democracy and digital peril
                                            |  Gérald Bronner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 275 to 283| Artificial intelligence and democracy
                                            |  Claude Revel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 285 to 295| Digital democracy and contemporary anti-politics
                                            |  Julien Chandelier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 297 to 306| Making a people: is the use of social media accompanied by a
peculiar imagined community?
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 307 to 312| “Media conversation is more and more insincere”
                                            |  Anne Rosencher,  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 313 to 326| The digital opinion factory: manipulated citizens
                                            |  Guillaume Cazeaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 327 to 338| What corporations do with artificial intelligence is going to shape
our societies
                                            |  Eric Chaney
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 341 to 345| Introduction
                                            |  Paul Audi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 347 to 358| The passion of identity
                                            |  Perrine Simon-Nahum
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 359 to 370| Liberty and its enemies: terms of resistance
                                            |  Nicolas Tenzer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 371 to 379| Democracy and the terrorist challenge
                                            |  Jenny Raflik
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 381 to 393| The left’s problem with islamism. On Chris Harman’s French legacy
                                            |  Florence Bergeaud-Blackler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 395 to 408| Gag orders
                                            |  Caroline Valentin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 409 to 419| Evangelical Protestants and the French republic: reconquest,
retreat, reinforcement?
                                            |  Sébastien Fath
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 421 to 427| Democratic decadence and the rise of anti-semitism
                                            |  David Haziza
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 429 to 436| October 7th, Europe and the Jews
                                            |  Danny Trom
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 439 to 443| Introduction
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 445 to 457| Geopolitics of migrations and democracy in the European Union
                                            |  Gérard-François Dumont
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 459 to 470| Immigration in France, a social issue
                                            |  Didier Leschi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 471 to 481| The war in Ukraine on the historical scale
                                            |  Alexandre Melnik
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 483 to 496| Israel, Palestinians and the “day after”
                                            |  Denis Charbit
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 497 to 503| From the Convention for the Prevention and Repression of the crime
of genocide to the controversy around the Middle East conflict
                                            |  Otto Pfersmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 505 to 519| UNRWA: a paradigmatic case of a UN agency going wrong
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 521 to 533| Moscow, Teheran, Beijing: a neo-totalitarian and anti-Western axis
                                            |  Pierre Raiman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 537 to 546| Where is France headed?
                                            |  Boualem Sansal
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_099</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The market economy against capitalism
                    | Cités
            (2024/3 No 99)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2024-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-10-15T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2024-10-21T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 7| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 14| Introduction
                                            |  Valérie Charolles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 29| Adam Smith’s capabilities approach. A foundation for
post-capitalism
                                            |  Thierry C. Pauchant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 44| The imaginary institution of capitalism. The economic philosophy of
Cornelius Castoriadis
                                            |  Raffaele Alberto Ventura
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 64| Neoliberalism: a revision of liberalism, or capitalist
fundamentalism?
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 77| The sick economics of neoclassical financial theory
                                            |  Christian Walter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 91| Economics and ideology. On the confusion between market economy and
capitalism
                                            |  Valérie Charolles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 110| Worker participation in business governance, or “total revolution”
                                            |  Olivier Favereau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 116| Introduction
                                            |  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 125| School as a place of division
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Lebrun
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 135| Secularism at school (1989-2024), from ignorance to anxiety:
testimony of a literature teacher
                                            |  Maryse Haslé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 149| Schools going digital: for whose benefit? The “school 4.0”
experience
                                            |  Audrey Vinel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 160| From republican schools to algorithmic schools
                                            |  Marius Bertolucci
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 164| Introduction
                                            |  Éric Pommier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 171| Arne Næss’s eco-deliberative politics
                                            |  Éric Pommier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 178| Deep ecology amidst violence, authoritarianism and inculturation:
some observations on Naess’s ecosophy
                                            |  Luca Valera
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 185| Arne Naess and pragmatism
                                            |  Rémi Beau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 187 to 192| Deep ecology tested by the eco-feminist critique. What
universalism, for what political ecology?
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 195| Pascal Perrineau, <i>Le Goût de la politique. Un observateur
passionné de la V<sup>e</sup> République</i>, Paris, Odile Jacob,
2024
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 196| Bruno Karsenti, <i>La Place de Dieu. Religion et politique chez les
modernes</i>, Paris, Fayard, 2023
                                            |  Valérie Charolles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 196 to 198| Dominique Schnapper, <i>Les Désillusions de la démocratie</i>,
Paris, Gallimard, 2024
                                            |  Isabelle de Mecquenem
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 198 to 201| <i>Les Jeunes Hégéliens. Politique, religion, philosophie. Une
anthologie</i>, selected texts, translated from German, presented
and annotated by Franck Fischbach, Paris, Gallimard, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 202| Hartmut Rosa, <i>Rendre le monde indisponible</i> (2018), trad. fr.
Olivier Mannoni, Paris, La Découverte, 2023, édition de poche.
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 204| Hartmut Rosa, <i>Pourquoi la démocratie a besoin de la religion</i>
(2022), translated into French by Isis von Plato, Paris, La
Découverte, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 204 to 206| Emmanuelle Hénin, Xavier-Laurent Salvador, Pierre-Henri Tavoillot
(eds.), <i>Après la déconstruction. L’université au défi des
idéologies</i>, Paris, Odile Jacob, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_098</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Amartya Sen: economics and justice in an inegalitarian world
                    | Cités
            (2024/2 No 98)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2024-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-06-04T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2024-06-25T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 8| Editorial. The West and its enemies: Amartya Sen versus Samuel
Huntington and back
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 15| Introduction
                                            |  Emmanuel Picavet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 28| Capabilities and liberties
                                            |  Herrade Igersheim
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 29 to 45| Amartya Sen’s idea of justice faced with the issues of feminisms
                                            |  Muriel Gilardone
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 61| A different way of thinking about aid in public decision-making.
Amartya Sen and the debate on information
                                            |  Antoinette Baujard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 63 to 74| Amartya Sen: liberty, equality and complexity in an inegalitarian
world
                                            |  Fabien Tarrit
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 75 to 86| Amartya Sen and development. Participative approaches and connected
measure(s) of mortality and poverty
                                            |  Judith Favereau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 102| Amartya Sen: the theory of social choice
                                            |  Maurice Salles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 106| Judith Butler and willful blindness
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 127| Universities threatened by sectarian irrationalism
                                            |  François Rastier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 138| Ashes raining down on American universities
                                            |  Günther Jikeli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 141| Introduction
                                            |  Éric Pommier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 148| The subject and the world
                                            |  Renaud Barbaras
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 153| The theory of three movements in human existence
                                            |  Dragos Duicu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 160| The historical world and the problematics of meaning. Jan Patocˇka
and the project for a phenomenological philosophy of history
                                            |  Ovidiu Stanciu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 165| Phenomenology of art – the world unveiled
                                            |  Frédéric Jacquet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 167 to 169| Caroline Eliacheff et Céline Masson, <i>La Fabrique
de&#160;l’enfant-transgenre</i>, Paris, Éditions de l’Observatoire,
2022
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 169 to 170| Camille Riquier, <i>Métamorphose de Descartes. Le secret de
Sartre</i>, Paris, Gallimard, 2022
                                            |  Éric Pommier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 171| Jean Jacob, <i>Communauté ou société&#160;? Tönnies versus
Hobbes</i>, Vulaine-sur-Seine, Éditions du Croquant, 2024
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 172 to 174| Jean Grondin, <i>L’Esprit de l’éducation</i>, Paris, Puf, 2023
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 174 to 176| Marta Grabocz (ed.), <i>Narratologie musicale, topiques, théories
et stratégies analytiques</i>, Paris, Hermann, 2022
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 176 to 180| Patrick Desbois, <i>La Shoah par balles</i>, Paris, Plon, 2020
                                            |  Marc Sagnol
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 180 to 182| Dina Khapaeva, <i>Crimes sans châtiment. Aux sources du
poutinisme</i>, transl.&#160;Fr. Nina Kehayan, La Tour d’Aigues,
Éditions de l’Aube, 2024
                                            |  Otto Pfersmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 184| Markus Gabriel, <i>N’ayez pas peur de la morale.
La&#160;philosophie au secours des démocraties en crise</i>, Paris,
J.-C. Lattès, 2023
                                            |  Valérie Charolles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 184 to 185| Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, <i>La Mort des démocraties</i>,
Paris, Calmann-Lévy, coll.&#160;“Liberté de l’esprit”, 2020
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 186 to 187| Henry Kissinger, <i>De la Chine</i>, Paris, Librairie Arthème
Fayard, coll.&#160;“Pluriel”, 2024
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 187 to 188| Carole Talon-Hugon, <i>Histoire philosophique des arts. Œuvres,
concepts, théories</i>, Paris, Puf, 2024
                                            |  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 192| Olivier Wieviorka, <i>Histoire totale de la seconde guerre
mondiale</i>, Paris, Perrin et ministère des Armées, 2024
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 192 to 194| Julien Freund, <i>La Décadence</i>, Paris, Éditions du Cerf, 2023
(première édition, Paris, Sirey, 1984)
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 194 to 197| Ali Benmakhlouf, <i>L’Humanité des autres</i>, Paris, Albin Michel,
2024
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 197 to 199| Michel Foucault, <i>Le Discours philosophique</i>, édition établie,
sous la responsabilité de François Ewald, par Orazio Irrera et
Daniele Lorenzini, Paris, EHESS/Gallimard/Seuil, 2024
                                            |  Diogo Sardinha
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 200 to 200| Moishe Postone, <i>Marx, par-delà le marxisme. Repenser une théorie
critique du capitalisme au XXI<sup>e</sup>&#160;siècle</i>, Albi,
Crise &amp; Critique, 2023
                                            |  Diogo Sardinha
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 202| Sylvie Monchatre, Laurent Muller and Patrick Watier (eds.),
<i>Georg Simmel. Le social en mouvement. Individualisme et
modernité</i>, Strasbourg, Presses universitaires de Strasbourg,
2023
                                            |  Michel Messu
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_097</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        What is a man today?
                    | Cités
            (2024/1 No 97)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2024-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-03-19T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2024-03-28T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 10| Editorial. Rethinking male domination
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 16| Introduction
                                            |  Diogo Sardinha
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 32| Prolegomena to the question: What is a man today?
                                            |  Diogo Sardinha
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 42| Transidentity and self-determination: on the social extension of
the <i>fictio legis</i>
                                            |  Valérie Kokoszka,  Sam Ward,  Karolien Haese
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 55| An end to hegemonic masculinity? Leadership theory and gender
fluidity
                                            |  Ghislain Deslandes,  Jean-Philippe Bouilloud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 57 to 66| From one desert to another
                                            |  Nadia Tazi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 78| Masculinity in China today
                                            |  Demin Xu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 90| Metamorphoses of masculinity (1852-2046). A literary journey
                                            |  Laurent Quintreau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 105| Neo-virilism and far-right movements
                                            |  Juliette Grange
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 117| “Herculine Barbin: Archeology of a revolution”
                                            |  Catherine Marnas,  Diogo Sardinha
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 123| Introduction
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 140| Max Weber’s legacy: liberalism, critical theory, socio-ecology
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 153| Neutrality, comprehension, typology: three lessons from Weber on
sociological posture
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 173| Weber and charisma in politics. The modernity of an ideal type
                                            |  Yves Mény
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 188| Max Weber tested by 21st century geopolitics
                                            |  Danilo Martuccelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 200| Sobriety and moderation: a new capitalist asceticism or the end of
capitalism’s agonistic passions? Weber, capitalism and ecology
                                            |  Patrick Mardellat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 213| The Jihadist mega-pogrom of 7 October 2023: origins and action plan
                                            |  Pierre-André Taguieff
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_096</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Max Weber (1): new readings
                    | Cités
            (2023/4 No 96)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2023-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-11-21T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2023-12-19T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 8| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 16| Introduction
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 29| The Max Weber of Raymond Aron. Sociology, politics and the question
of the régime
                                            |  Gwendal Châton
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 48| Habermas, Bourdieu and Weberian Marxism
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 49 to 67| Can Weber’s letter of 30 December 1913 to his editor really be
taken seriously?
                                            |  Élisabeth Kauffmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 86| Paradoxical affinities. Max Weber and anarchism
                                            |  Michael Löwy,  Eleni Varikas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 99| Max Weber and the rationalisations of work
                                            |  Michel Lallement
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 111| Situating the texts
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 122| Contribution to the debate day of the Association for social
policy, on discussions about the productivity of collective
wellbeing
                                            |  Max Weber
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 126| Between two laws
                                            |  Max Weber
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 129| Democracy and aristocracy in American life
                                            |  Max Weber
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 144| The Left and Islam. The logic of an ideological drift
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 154| On “brotherism” and its networks
                                            |  Florence Bergeaud-Blackler,  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 157 to 172| Piety and reality: Tribute to Pier Paolo Pasolini
                                            |  Sabatino Barbati
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 182| “You can’t fight a social model, you have to make it outdated”.
Religious, commercial soft power attacks the Republic
                                            |  Aline Girard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 188| Jürgen Habermas, <i>Une histoire de la philosophie. I. La
constellation occidentale de la foi et du savoir (2019),</i> fr.
tr. Frédéric Joly, Paris, Gallimard, 2021&#160;; <i>Une histoire de
la philosophie. II. Liberté rationnelle. Traces du discours sur la
foi et le savoir (2019)</i>, fr. tr. Frédéric Joly, Paris,
Gallimard, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 191| Jürgen Habermas, <i>Espace public et démocratie délibérative : un
tournant (2022)</i>, fr. tr. Frédéric Joly, Paris, Gallimard, 2023
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 195| Monique Atlan et Roger-Pol Droit, <i>Quand la parole détruit</i>,
Paris, Éditions de l’Observatoire, 2023
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 197 to 200| Daniel Bernabé, <i>Le Piège identitaire. L’effacement de la
question sociale</i>, fr. tr. Patrick Marcolini, Paris, L’Échappée,
2022
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 207| Carlo Ginzburg, <i>Néanmoins, Machiavel</i>, <i>Pascal</i>, fr. tr.
Martin Rueff, Éditions Verdier, Paris, 2022
                                            |  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 209 to 212| Rémi Brague, <i>Sur l’islam</i>, Paris, Gallimard, coll.
«&#160;L’esprit de la cité&#160;», 2023
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 213 to 215| Hans Joas, <i>La Foi comme option. Possibilités d’avenir du
christianisme,</i> Paris, Salvator, 2020
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 217 to 219| Thibaud Gibelin, <i>Pourquoi Viktor Orbán joue et gagne. Résurgence
de l’Europe centrale</i>, Paris, Fauves Éditions, 2020
                                            |  Philippe Boulanger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 221 to 222| Nicole Athea, <i>Changer de sexe&#160;: un nouveau
désir&#160;?</i>, Paris, Hermann, 2022
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_095</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Talking of the future, making the present
                    | Cités
            (2023/3 No 95)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2023-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-09-12T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2023-10-27T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 14| Introduction
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 29| Such fine futures
                                            |  Ariel Colonomos
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 41| “I wish I didn’t know how to draw so that I could learn”,
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 54| Constructing political futures becomes more and more uncertain
                                            |  Luc Rouban
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 69| Strategy according to Terminator. The role of fictions at the heart
of organisations
                                            |  Nicolas Minvielle,  Olivier Wathelet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 82| Biotechnologies, artificial intelligences and their chimeras
                                            |  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 96| Early alert systems or the illusion of objectification
                                            |  Louise Beaumais
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 112| From the future of mankind to the futures of nature: social
sciences get to grips with the environment
                                            |  Céline Granjou
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 129| Getting beyond capitalism through (science) fiction? How the
imaginary finds vanishing lines by deconstruction
                                            |  Yannick Rumpala
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 140| How will we make society tomorrow? A thought-experiment to test
civic loyalty
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 144| Introduction
                                            |  Aliocha Wald Lasowski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 150| Towards the Tout-monde
                                            |  Hiroshi Matsui
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 158| Glissant’s thinking is dissident
                                            |  François Noudelmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 163| The Chaos-world may play a role in our private lives
                                            |  Touhfat Mouhtare
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 169| Édouard Glissant and the desperate need for the Republic
                                            |  Rachel Khan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 178| Créolisation is a contact sport
                                            |  Aliocha Wald Lasowski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 182| Introduction
                                            |  Michel Messu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 187| Social democracy and political guardianship
                                            |  Guy Groux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 193| Paritarism and social protection organisations
                                            |  Julien Damon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 203| Participative democracy in Switzerland
                                            |  Marc-Henry Soulet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 209| Social democracy: an alternative legitimacy?
                                            |  Michel Messu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 211 to 226| The existential enemy and the “power to kill”: Reinhart Koselleck
between Martin Heidegger and Carl Schmitt
                                            |  Emmanuel Faye
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_094</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        State secrets and raison d’État today
                    | Cités
            (2023/2 No 94)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2023-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-04-06T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2023-06-14T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 8| Éditorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 12| Introduction
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 23| Invisible power and raison d’État
                                            |  Vincenzo Sorrentino
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 43| An “emergency raison d’état”: what state of exception are we living
in?
                                            |  Julien Le Mauff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 58| Dialogue on raison d’État in France today
                                            |  Alain Laquièze,  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 68| Trump in the White House: withdrawal of democracy and (dé)raison
d’État
                                            |  Alix Meyer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 80| Putin’s Russia: raison d’État with no state
                                            |  Nicolas Tenzer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 94| Between moral certitude and strict discontinuity: raison d’État in
Germany after 1945
                                            |  Otto Pfersmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 106| The political question in Israel: what rationality?
                                            |  Elhanan Yakira
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 129| In Italy, raison d’État hides an institutional and constitutional
disaster
                                            |  Gianfranco Borrelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 134| Introduction
                                            |  Gérard Bensussan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 139| The Russian Federation’s doubly-illicit war in Ukraine
                                            |  Emmanuel Daoud,  Gabriel Sebbah
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 148| Kidnap alert!
                                            |  Pierre Raiman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 153| Judging Russian war crimes
                                            |  Luba Jurgenson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 157| Sub-Russians
                                            |  Gérard Bensussan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 163| Ukraine, culture at half-mast
                                            |  Alexis Nuselovici
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 169| Russia must lose this war
                                            |  Jonathan Littell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 175| Introduction
                                            |  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 181| Individuality and solidarity: John Stuart Mill and the “new” social
liberalism
                                            |  Catherine Audard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 187| Three remarks on the feminism of John Stuart Mill
                                            |  Françoise Orazi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 193| Participation or competence? Mill on representative democracy
                                            |  Ludmilla Lorrain
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 199| John Stuart Mill the educator: a lesson in life
                                            |  Camille Dejardin
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_093</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Authoritarian regimes and the destruction of thought
                    | Cités
            (2023/1 No 93)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2023-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-12-13T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2023-03-22T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 7| Editorial, “Pro patria mori”, according to Putin
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 16| Introduction
                                            |  Eva Segura
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 34| The totalitarism of “race”, “heredity” and good health
                                            |  Benoit Massin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 44| Language in shreds: totalitarian thinking and the fragmentation of
language
                                            |  Olivier Mannoni
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 63| Totalitarianism and authoritarianism in critical theory
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 77| Social networks between democracy and authoritarian regimes
                                            |  Florian Forestier,  Chloé Fiodière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 91| Is Nazism our contemporary? On reference to Nazism, its limits, its
teaching
                                            |  Johann Chapoutot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 112| Metaphysics of totalitarianism. Contribution to an archaeology of
destruction
                                            |  Jean Vioulac
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 126| Putin’s Russia and the collaboration of the Western far-right
                                            |  Benoit Massin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 128| Introduction
                                            |  Céline Masson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 133| How children are ensnared. A dialogue
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Winter,  Caroline Eliacheff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 139| From body image to the body in the image
                                            |  Sylvie Quesemand Zucca
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 145| The “transgender” phenomenon in adolescence and coercive social
networks
                                            |  Angélique Gozlan,  Céline Masson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 151| Cyber-coercion and adolescent radicality
                                            |  Thierry Lamote,  Alexandre Ledrait
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 166| Republic, public use of reason and education in Kant
                                            |  Romina Perni
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_092</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Ecological reasons, ecological passions
                    | Cités
            (2022/4 No 92)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2022-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-09-27T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-12-15T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 8| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 13| Introduction
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 29| The hypothesis of green capitalism
                                            |  Philippe Pelletier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 42| Ecology, naturally on the right?
                                            |  Jean Jacob
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 55| Ecofascism and integral ecology, or the utilisation of ecological
emergency by right-wing extremists
                                            |  Juliette Grange
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 57 to 68| Resilient energy transition
                                            |  Vincent Mignerot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 83| The inevitable anthropological obstacle. Anti-ecological unreason
and passion
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 99| Joyous separation. A possible ethics for the ecological city?
                                            |  Cécile Renouard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 108| From democracy to ecology and vice versa
                                            |  Joëlle Zask
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 126| What politics of emancipation? The missed eco-republican
opportunity of political ecology
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 140| Extremism as representation and as anathema
                                            |  Pierre-André Taguieff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 150| In search of extreme thinking
                                            |  Gérald Bronner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 163| The extreme right: avatars and invariables
                                            |  Michel Winock
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 179| The political uses of extremism in Russia
                                            |  Jules Sergei Fediunin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 183| Introduction
                                            |  Cristina Ion
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 185 to 192| Restitutions of artworks, a change of approach or gestures for the
media?
                                            |  Sébastien Gökalp
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 201| “Our world is a plural world, a world which has no centre”
                                            |  Souleymane Bachir Diagne,  Cristina Ion
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 209| “Doing research to get works out of collections goes against
nature”
                                            |  Didier Schulmann,  Cristina Ion
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_091</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Diabolical causality: new figures
                    | Cités
            (2022/3 No 91)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2022-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-09-19T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-09-22T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 19| Introduction
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 34| Anthropophobia: the human as the figure of contemporary evil
                                            |  Gérald Bronner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 46| “Blasphemous evil” and renewed praise of censorship
                                            |  Jacques de Saint-Victor
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 62| Diabolisation and dediabolisation of popular cultures
                                            |  Guy Saez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 63 to 74| The devil’s pen and nature’s errors
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 75 to 88| <i>Le diable au corps</i>
                                            |  Janine Mossuz-Lavau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 98| Interview with an exorcist priest
                                            |  Virginie Tournay,  Guy Saez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 112| The devil’s reactionaries, or the return of age-old religions
                                            |  Renée Fregosi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 120| The logic of the scapegoat in politics: uses and misuses of the
notion of antifascism
                                            |  Pascal Perrineau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 137| The diabolisation of the Jews: function of a fiction
                                            |  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 154| The two meanings of the caliphate and the conversion of the world
                                            |  Valérie Kokoszka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 174| Jacques Lacan and the question of writing
                                            |  Éric Marty
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 179| Roger-Pol Droit, Claude Jeandel (eds.), <i>Vie bonne et grand
âge</i>, Paris, Puf, 2021
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Cléro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 183| Massimo Cacciari, <i>Enfanter Dieu</i>, translated into French by
J. Malherbe-Galy and J.-L. Nardone, Paris, Éditions de l’Éclat,
2022
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_090</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Simone de Beauvoir, a philosophy of ambiguity
                    | Cités
            (2022/2 No 90)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2022-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-05-13T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-06-07T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 7| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 19| Introduction
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 32| Transcendence and the difficulties of ambiguity
                                            |  Christina Schües
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 43| Motherhood, an unexpected quarrel
                                            |  Carla Canullo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 63| Contemporary relevance of the ethics of <i>The Second Sex</i>
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Cléro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 79| Simone de Beauvoir: explaining China?
                                            |  François Frimat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 94| Autobiography as philosophy
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 113| Ageing, existing
                                            |  Juliette Grange
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 130| Dignity and sovereignty in de Beauvoir: a reading of <i>A Very Easy
Death</i>
                                            |  Annabel Herzog
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 144| Simone de Beauvoir and the cinematic encounter
                                            |  Lori Jo Marso
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 153| The French intelligentsia face to face with science
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Dupuy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 164| Scientific imposture at the National Institute of Demographic
Studies?
                                            |  Jean-François Mignot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 178| The antivaxxer revolt. An avatar of possessive individualism
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 186| From one neutrality to the other: ambiguities in the concept of
carbon neutrality
                                            |  Florian Zito
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 187 to 190| Benjamin Olivennes, <i>L’Autre Art contemporain. Vrais artistes et
fausses valeurs</i>, Paris, Grasset, 2021,
                                            |  Beat Michel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 194| L’Homme. Sa nature et sa position dans le monde, French translation
C. Sommer, Paris, Gallimard, “Bibliothèque de philosophie”, 2020,
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 198| <i>La Peur ou la liberté, suivi de “Le libéralisme de la peur” de
Judith Shklar</i>, Paris, Premier Parallèle, 2020
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_089</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Inequality in all its forms
                    | Cités
            (2022/1 No 89)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2022-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-02-21T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2022-03-14T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 12| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 19| Introduction
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 25| The history of inequalities: an overview
                                            |  Walter Scheidel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 49| Neoliberalism, inequalities and ecological issues
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 65| The geo-ecology of major inequalities between continents according
to Jared Diamond
                                            |  Patrice Bretaudière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 86| Global cities and inequalities: globalisation or financialisation?
                                            |  Olivier Godechot,  Nicolas Woloszko
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 101| Fighting and protecting against gender inequalities: living at the
heart of the women’s liberation movement
                                            |  Justine Zeller
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 118| Marie de Gournay, a philosophy of equalities at the dawn of the
17th century
                                            |  Isabelle Krier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 119 to 136| The fates of discourse on the origin of inequality in contemporary
political thought
                                            |  Jean-Marc Durand-Gasselin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 150| The French Revolution and inequality
                                            |  Jean-Clément Martin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 152| Introduction to the text by J. Habermas
                                            |  Jürgen Habermas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 171| The pandemic: protecting fundamental rights in an exceptional
situation
                                            |  Jürgen Habermas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 176| Introduction
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 195| The archaeology of a polemical representation, the “Great
Replacement”
                                            |  Pierre-André Taguieff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 197 to 205| The notion of the great replacement put to the test of numerical
evaluation
                                            |  Michèle Tribalat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 207 to 214| Zemmour: reflections on the edge of a pustule
                                            |  Jacques Tarnero
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 215 to 222| Thought police and intellectual terrorism: a historian on trial
                                            |  Édith Fuchs
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_088</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Norbert Elias, a thinker to be rediscovered
                    | Cités
            (2021/4 No 88)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2021-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-11-25T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-12-23T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 25| Introduction
                                            |  Nathalie Heinich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 40| Don’t touch! A more civilised relationship between authorities and
the body “itself”?
                                            |  Dominique Memmi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 54| With and against Freud. Norbert Elias and historical social
psychology
                                            |  Hervé Mazurel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 72| Norbert Elias and 19th-century European history: some perspectives
(2000-2021)
                                            |  Quentin Deluermoz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 88| Norbert Elias and political science: a somewhat unnatural but happy
marriage
                                            |  Florence Delmotte
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 105| The philosopher in his ordinary state
                                            |  Claire Pagès
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 119| Connecting jurists to the work of Norbert Elias
                                            |  Jean-Louis Halpérin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 133| Norbert Elias and the notion of “bourgeois Marxism”
                                            |  Lyvann Vaté
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 138| Introduction
                                            |  Virginie Tournay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 145| “Clandestine, dispersed violence”: the dilution of war
                                            |  Jean-Baptiste Jeangène Vilmer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 151| Terrorism, counter-terrorism and the despecification of war
                                            |  Cyrille Bret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 158| The digital revolution and transformations of war
                                            |  Céline Marangé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 163| A European way in cyberspace
                                            |  Florent Parmentier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 169| The figure of the enemy in cyberpunk
                                            |  Virginie Tournay,  Laurent Genefort
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 187| Post-feminism and the return of the ancient Great Goddess myth
                                            |  François Rastier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 196| Is sovereignty necessarily the right over life and death?
                                            |  Liang Pang
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_087</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Anti-Semitism: permanence and metamorphoses
                    | Cités
            (2021/3 No 87)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2021-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-09-13T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-09-20T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 10| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 18| Introduction
                                            |  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 32| Are Jews the victims of Holocaust memory?
                                            |  Iannis Roder
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 50| “The Germans will never forgive the Jews for Auschwitz” (Zvi Rex).
Origin, scope and limits of the concepts of “secondary
anti-Semitism”
                                            |  Bruno Quelennec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 72| Anti-Semitism, an anti-racism like any other
                                            |  David Haziza
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 85| “Eternally new” anti-Semitism
                                            |  Gérard Bensussan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 97| To what does Judaism pose obstruction? Anti-Semitism and Apocalypse
                                            |  Perrine Simon-Nahum
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 112| Anti-Semitism or philo-Semitism: a poorly-posed problem
                                            |  Pierre-André Taguieff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 129| Anti-Semitism, a symptom that needs decoding
                                            |  Sarah Abitbol
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 143| “Jew” as a signifier
                                            |  Christian Godin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 157| Inquiry into new anti-Semitic narratives, interview with Avishag
Zafrani
                                            |  Marc Weitzmann,  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 162| Introduction
                                            |  Eva Segura
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 175| Nazism as individual and collective deviance. A historiographical
review
                                            |  Nicolas Patin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 194| <i>“Eichmanns gab es viele”</i>: from the history of a Nazi to the
Nazi of history
                                            |  Fabien Théofilakis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 210| The banality of evil is not a cliché
                                            |  Roger Berkowitz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 211 to 230| Eichmann as a supposed cold bureaucrat, or a convenient lie to
avoid personal responsibility in Germany
                                            |  Günther Jikeli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 231 to 244| Hannah Arendt and Gerhard/Gershom Scholem: a passionate friendship
                                            |  Michelle-Irène Brudny
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 245 to 254| Football, an ideological conduit for racist racialisation
                                            |  Jean-Marie Brohm,  Fabien Ollier,  Raymond Sémédo
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_086</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Anti-Semitism: permanence and metamorphoses
                    | Cités
            (2021/2 No 86)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2021-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-05-20T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-06-11T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 12| Introduction
                                            |  Isabelle Barbéris,  Franck Neveu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 29| Language, law, order
                                            |  Franck Neveu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 40| On the expression <i>“cancel culture”</i>
                                            |  Isabelle Barbéris
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 55| Deconstructing common French?
                                            |  Sonia Branca-Rosoff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 57 to 70| The cost of opaque spelling for those learning to read
                                            |  Liliane Sprenger-Charolles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 86| The great divides of inclusive writing. Between love of language
and love of me, me, me
                                            |  Danièle Manesse
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 98| French language rights: between inclusion and exclusion
                                            |  Jordane Arlettaz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 104| French is the language of the Republic
                                            |  André Bellon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 114| Jaime Semprun and archaeolanguage
                                            |  Patrick Marcolini
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 125| On literature considered as a means of oppression
                                            |  Marc Hersant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 140| Ashamed of their native language
                                            |  Jean-Claude Milner,  Isabelle Barbéris,  Franck Neveu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 156| Censorship and proscription in conquered territory
                                            |  François Rastier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 157 to 173| Surveillance and punishment: testimonies of a climate of censorship
in universities
                                            |  Yana Grinshpun,  Jean Szlamowicz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 186| The sickness of the age: incest and paedophilia
                                            |  Caroline Eliacheff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 187 to 200| Éric Marty, <i>Le Sexe des Modernes. Pensée du Neutre et théorie du
genre</i>, Paris, Seuil, coll. «&#160;Fiction &amp; Cie&#160;»,
2021, interview with Laurent Zimmermann
                                            |  Éric Marty,  Laurent Zimmerman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 211| Pierre-André Taguieff, <i>L’Imposture décoloniale. Science
imaginaire et pseudo-antiracisme</i>, Paris, Éditions de
l’Observatoire/Humensis, 2020, by Véronique Taquin
                                            |  Véronique Taquin
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CITE_085</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Camus, political writer
                    | Cités
            (2021/1 No 85)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cites-2021-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-03-04T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-03-22T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 3 to 8| Editorial
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 14| Introduction
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 37| Camus’ libertarian socialism confronted with the challenges of
modernity
                                            |  Serge Audier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 53| Nihilism ou sorrowful intelligence in the work of Albert Camus
                                            |  Avishag Zafrani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 66| Intoxicating antitotalitarianism. Camus, Orwell, Chiaromonte
                                            |  François Bordes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 81| Camus: science, ecology and anarchy
                                            |  Philippe Pelletier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 93| Reading <i>L’État de siège</i> today
                                            |  Denis Salas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 100| Camus and the critique of violence
                                            |  Ramin Jahanbegloo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 106| “Doing one’s job as a man”. Albert Camus’ commitment
                                            |  Vincent Duclert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 119| US Elections: Joe Biden at the heart of the “war of two Americas”
                                            |  Michael C. Behrent
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 124| The nature of political islamism and its power of seduction
                                            |  Yves Charles Zarka
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 125| Introduction
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 138| “Learning to read deeply and to speak of great things”
                                            |  Denis Kambouchner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 150| Is the school of the Republic made for the Republic?
                                            |  Catherine Kintzler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 154| <i>Le Végétarisme des Lumières. L’abstinence de viande dans la
France du XVIIIe siècle</i>, Paris, Classiques Garnier, 2019,
                                            |  Eva Segura
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 157| <i>Ethnologie du bureau</i>, Paris, Éditions Métailié, 2020,
                                            |  Marie-Anne Lescourret
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
    </feed>
