<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
    <title>Ethnologie française | Cairn.info</title>
    <icon>https://shs.cairn.info/build/assets/cairn-B7RWiji2.png</icon>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:rss/revue/E_ETHN</id>
    <rights>Cairn.info 2026</rights>

    <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/rss/revue/E_ETHN" rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" />
    <link href="https://shs.cairn.info?lang=en" type="text/html" />

    <updated>2026-01-12T00:00:00+01:00</updated>

                <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_253</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The war in Ukraine and exile
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2025/3 Vol. 55)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2025-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-12-17T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2026-01-12T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 18| <i>Introduction</i>. The war in Ukraine, exile, and the social
sciences
                                            |  Ronan Hervouet,  Tatyana Shukan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 33| Ukrainian women’s “map of connections”: Geographic trajectories and
relational resources in exile
                                            |  Catherine Lejeune,  Camille Schmoll,  Ivan Savchuk,  Olena Savchuk
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 54| Ukrainian family trajectories in the “in-between”: The
reconfiguration of kinship networks through mobilization in exile
(2014–2024)
                                            |  Grégoire Le Gall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 71| Fleeing and writing. Ukrainian scholars in exile
                                            |  Dorota Dakowska
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 89| Re(living) exile: Trajectories and experiences of Belarusian double
exiles in Poland and Lithuania
                                            |  Tatyana Shukan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 108| Dimensionalities of exile: First-person accounts
of&#160;belonging/alienation experiences wrought by&#160;emigration
from Russia
                                            |  Glutz O.,  Derkach O.,  Nagel J.,  Sergeeva M.,  K. A.
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 122| Making do in the meantime: Ukrainian refugees’ everyday
resourcefulness
                                            |  Denys Gorbach
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 137| Do women in exile join the diaspora?
                                            |  Hervé Amiot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 154| “- What’s your superpower?&#160;–&#160;I am Ukrainian”
                                            |  Joséphine Brive
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 170| Hospitality on the borders of empire
                                            |  Anne Le Huérou,  Françoise Daucé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 186| The war in Ukraine as an event reconfiguring Belarusian diasporic
organizations
                                            |  Agnieszka Fihel,  Magdalena Lesińska
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 187 to 203| Spaces created by exile: Russian migrants in Tbilisi, 2022–2024
                                            |  Olga Bronnikova,  Anna Zaytseva
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 207 to 221| Auschwitz and the sensory dimensions of inquiry in pandemic times:
a double absence
                                            |  Ewa Tartakowsky
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 223 to 224| Fabien Truong et Gérôme Truc. <i>Grands ensemble. Violence,
solidarités et ressentiment dans les quartiers populaires</i>.
Paris, Éditions La Découverte, 2025, 374&#160;p.
                                            |  Jeanne Demoulin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 224 to 226| David Zeitlyn. <i>An Anthropological Toolkit: Sixty Useful
Concepts</i>. Oxford, Berghahn Books, 2022, 150&#160;p.
                                            |  Anne Friederike Delouis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 226 to 228| Anne-Christine Trémon. <i>Anthropologie contemporaine</i>. Paris,
Armand Colin, 2024, 400&#160;p.
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_252</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Ethnographing loneliness
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2025/2 Vol. 55)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2025-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-10-02T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-10-14T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[La solitude se construit et se transforme au fil des siècles à
l’aune des évolutions sociales et scientifiques, des
représentations culturelles, des préoccupations politiques et des
mentalités. Aujourd’hui pensée comme un problème social, la
solitude est un enjeu au coeur des politiques de santé publique,
qui la placent à la croisée de domaines comme l’éducation, la
solidarité ou la cohésion sociale. On voit d’après ces évolutions
qu’elle ne peut être considérée, au fil du temps et des époques,
selon une progression linéaire. Elle s’inscrit au coeur d’une
histoire en tension, témoignant des bouleversements sociaux et
culturels, redéfinissant sans cesse les frontières entre isolement,
appartenance et introspection.Ne pas typifier mais décrire,
comprendre et documenter la diversité des expériences de la
solitude appréhendée à la fois comme un état et un processus,
telles sont les principales caractéristiques des articles de ce
numéro d’Ethnologie française. Ainsi, les contributions redéploient
la complexité que cache la stabilisation sémantique du mot en
offrant un regard ethnographique sur la solitude, complémentaire
aux perspectives dominantes développées en sciences humaines et
sociales.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 1 to 4| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 15| Introduction
                                            |  Séverine Dessajan,  Hadrien Riffaut,  Delphine Saurier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 16 to 27| Loneliness and violence: A study of the agricultural world
                                            |  Romain Daviere
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 29 to 45| Soloists: Parental responsibility, “statutory” solitude, and
relational support in the experience of lone motherhood
                                            |  Hélène Malmanche,  Margot Lenouvel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 57| “No one will realize I’m dead”: from residential solitude to social
death
                                            |  Camille Duthy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 75| Alone among others
                                            |  Fiona Del Puppo,  Luca Pattaroni
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 90| Isolation and loneliness in middle and high school: The experience
of young people with mental or psychological disabilities
                                            |  Louisa Laidi,  Godefroy Lansade
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 106| Finding meaning in homelessness: the experience of loneliness on
the street and within assistance institutions
                                            |  Laura Delcourt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 121| Navigating solitude
                                            |  Sylvain Bordiec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 139| “I won’t see him anymore? How long will it last? Well, forever”
                                            |  Isabelle Delaunay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 158| A lonely little box: Incels, isolation, and avatar pictures as a
digital political canvas
                                            |  Ozan Félix Sousbois
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 173| Joining forces in solitude
                                            |  Tanguy Virin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 190| Alone with the world around them: tales of solitude among
Chartreuse Terminorum runners
                                            |  Simon Lancelevé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 206| Self-isolation on the road: the everyday faces of solitude behind
the wheel
                                            |  Hervé Marchal,  Gaëtan Mangin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 207 to 209| Claire FLÉCHER, <i>À bord des géants des mers. Ethnographie
embarquée de la logistique globalisée</i>, Paris, La Découverte,
2023, 224&#160;p.
                                            |  Guillaume Lejeune
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 209 to 212| Franck MERMIER and Virginie MILLIOT (eds.), <i>L’Anonymat urbain
est-il universel&#160;? Une anthropologie comparative de la
citadinité</i>, Paris, Karthala, 2024, 278&#160;p.
                                            |  Thierry Boissière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 212 to 213| Alain MINET, <i>Devenir parent d’un enfant différent. Parcours
initiatiques et dynamiques psychiques</i>, Paris, Éditions
Sociographe, 2024, 192&#160;p.
                                            |  Alexandra Piesen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 217 to 231| Location effects, group effects, and loyalty conflicts: jihadist
engagement as a process of circumstantial and constrained
involvement
                                            |  Chaïb Benaïssa
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 233 to 248| “It’s embarrassing”: Youth conventions of self-presentation in
urban and digital spaces
                                            |  Claire Balleys,  Annamaria Colombo,  Marianna Colella
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 249 to 266| Obstinate forms, latency, change
                                            |  Danièle Dossetto
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 267 to 268| Dorothée DELACROIX and Anne-Marie LOSONCZY (eds.), <i>Le cadavre et
ses avatars. Approches anthropologiques en contexte de sortie de
violence</i>, Paris, Éditions Pétra, coll. “Le cadavre dans les
génocides et les violences de masse”, 2022, 238&#160;p.
                                            |  Carolina Kobelinsky
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 268 to 271| Marie-Louise TENÈZE, <i>Le Conte merveilleux. Séminaire de Brest et
textes inédits</i>, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2024, coll. “Anthropologie
du monde occidental” (Edited and presented by Nicole&#160;Belmont
and Josiane&#160;Bru), 287&#160;p.
                                            |  Marlène Albert Llorca
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 271 to 273| Raja ABILLAMA, <i>Secular Coexistence in Lebanon: Christians,
Muslims and Subjects of Law</i>, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University
Press, 2024, 2816&#160;p.
                                            |  Nicolas Puig
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 275 to 277| Back matter
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_251</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Towards an anthropology of experiences of de-heritage
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2025/1 Vol. 55)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2025-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-03-27T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-04-09T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 1 to 4| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 18| Introduction
                                            |  Romain Bertrand,  Mathilde Bielawski,  Cyril Isnart
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 32| The making and unmaking of heritage
                                            |  Bastien Couturier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 53| Emergence and disappearance of a care facility.
                                            |  Karine-Larissa Basset
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 67| Declassification and ghost objects
                                            |  Amandine Peyraud-Mamys
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 86| Reimagining museography beyond heritagization frameworks
                                            |  Noël Barbe
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 102| Objects-as-ancestors
                                            |  Marion Bertin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 115| Alpinism to forgo its cultural heritage status?
                                            |  Bernard Debarbieux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 134| Dancing the Auvergne bourrée in a traditional ball
                                            |  Raphaël Blanchier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 149| “Culture has no need for houses”
                                            |  Matteo Gallo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 166| “Anthropology at attention!”
                                            |  Jean Frances
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 167 to 180| The scholarly life: behind you or ahead of you?
                                            |  Jean Copans
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 183| Michel Rautenberg, <i>L’Imaginaire patrimonial. Figures de
l’urbanité contemporaine</i>, Rennes, Presses universitaires de
Rennes, 2024, 258&#160;p.
                                            |  Jean-Louis Tornatore
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 184 to 189| Felicity Bodenstein, Margareta von Oswald, Damiana Oţoiu and Anna
Seiderer, <i>Traces du dé/colonial au musée</i>, Paris, Horizons
d’attente, 2024, 288&#160;p.
                                            |  Nayeli Palomo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 191| Lynne C. Manzo and Patrick Devine-Wright (eds.), <i>Place
Attachment: Advances in Theory, Methods, and Applications</i>,
Londres/New York, Routledge, 2021, 268&#160;p.
                                            |  Léa Le Calvé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 192 to 194| Anne-Sophie Haeringer and Jean-Louis Tornatore (eds.), <i>Héritage
et anthropocène. En finir avec le patrimoine</i>, Nancy, Arbre bleu
Éditions, 2022, 192&#160;p.
                                            |  Alaia Cachenaut
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 194 to 196| Saskia Cousin Kouton, <i>Ògún et les matrimoines</i>, Paris, Presse
universitaires de Paris Nanterre, 2024, 289&#160;p.
                                            |  Pascale-Marie Milan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 196 to 198| Bruno Brulon Soares, <i>The Anticolonial Museum. Reclaiming Our
Colonial Heritage</i>, London/New York, Routledge, 2024,
164&#160;p.
                                            |  Magali Dufau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 199 to 201| Emmanuelle Durand, <i>L’Envers des fripes. Les vêtements dans les
plis de la mondialisation</i>, Paris, Premier Parallèle, coll.
“Carnets parallèles/La vie des choses”, 2024, 160&#160;p.
                                            |  Vincent Chabault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 202| Pascal Ory, <i>Qu’est-ce qu’une nation&#160;? Une histoire
mondiale</i>, Paris, Gallimard (Bibliothèque des Histoires), 2020,
480&#160;p.
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 204| Back matter
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_243</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Martine Segalen
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2024/3 Vol. 54)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[In search of trails]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2024-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-11-15T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2024-11-22T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 9| Introduction
                                            |  Michèle Baussant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 13| Only extraordinary things
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 14 to 15| In Mia's footsteps in Mexico
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 16 to 16| A committed intellectual
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 17| Sociology of my grandmother
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 18 to 20| Portrait of the ethnologist as a mother
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 22 to 24| A look at a few objects
                                            |  Raphaël Bories
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 29| Martine at the Museum
                                            |  Gérard Collomb
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 30 to 33| Research at the National Museum of Popular Arts and Traditions
                                            |  Martine Jaoul
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 46| Revisiting oneself. Autoethnographic practices by Martine Segalen
                                            |  Nicolas Adell,  Marie-Charlotte Calafat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 50| ATP at MUCEM: meeting the challenges of a
21<sup>st</sup>&#160;-century museum
                                            |  Denis Chevallier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 59| Martine Segalen, researcher at the National Museum of Popular Arts
and Traditions
                                            |  Raphaël Bories
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 60 to 66| These may be details to you…
                                            |  Anne Monjaret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 69| Sports and objects from the modern world
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 72 to 75| Two parties for young women of marriageable age that follow one
another and resemble each other...
                                            |  Anne Monjaret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 76 to 77| A milliner in the mountain pastures
                                            |  Anne Monjaret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 83| We were talking about family
                                            |  Nicole Lapierre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 84 to 87| Martine Segalen, a leading figure in the socio-anthropology of the
family
                                            |  Claudine Attias-Donfut
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 88 to 89| For Martine Segalen…
                                            |  Françoise Zonabend
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 90 to 95| In the absence of teachers
                                            |  Agnès Fine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 96 to 100| Transmission, memory, family
                                            |  Gérôme Truc
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 105| Sociology of the family: Martine Segalen, transmitter of knowledge
                                            |  Agnès Martial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 106 to 111| About surrogacy. An unfinished dialogue with Martine Segalen
                                            |  Jérôme Courduriès
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 112 to 114| One more dance with her
                                            |  André Burguière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 116 to 117| Miss France, or the continuation of Les Rosières...
                                            |  Marie-Charlotte Calafat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 124| Rediscovering Europe
                                            |  Orvar Löfgren
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 128| Martine Segalen: a European ethnologist
                                            |  Maria Couroucli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 132| For Martine: ATPs in Nanterre, among other places
                                            |  Georges Augustins
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 139| On the margins of French anthropology Martine Segalen, a
trailblazer
                                            |  Kali Argyriadis,  Sara Le Menestrel,  Gabriel Segré
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 140 to 143| Martine rediscovered. The journey of an unfinished relationship
                                            |  Ana Vera Estrada
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 150| Martine &amp; João: A Short Note on a Long Case
of&#160;Intellectual Camaraderie
                                            |  João Pina-Cabral
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 164| Enduring Islamophobia in Poland: Historical Images and Contemporary
Attitudes
                                            |  Michał Buchowski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 168| Martine Segalen and Italy
                                            |  Cristina Papa
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 169 to 174| Horizon Europe
                                            |  Sophie Chevalier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 187| Social organization and kinship terminology of the Tai Dam people
of Mai Chau (Vietnam)
                                            |  Bernard Formoso
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 188 to 192| Cultural areas, a “zombie” concept?
                                            |  Gilles Raveneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 195| A look back at a work that is now out of print
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 198 to 199| The journey with her is not over
                                            |  Vanessa Manceron
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 200 to 202| May you live a long life, Martine
                                            |  Michèle Baussant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 205| Martine Segalen, <i>Destins français. Essai d’auto-ethnographie
familiale</i> Paris, Créaphis Éditions, 2022, 315&#160;pages
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Hassoun
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 207| Valérie Gondran and Véronique Dassié, <i>Les Objets de mon père</i>
Paris, Éditions d’une rive à l’autre, 2023, 81&#160;pages
                                            |  Piera Rossetto
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 207 to 209| Marie Buscatto, <i>La très grande taille au féminin. Les
ambivalences d’une stature «&#160;hors norme&#160;»</i> Paris, CNRS
Éditions, 2022, 287&#160;pages
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Hassoun
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_242</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The challenges of open science: a shared anthropology?
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2024/2 Vol. 54)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2024-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-06-04T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2024-06-26T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 16| Introduction: Is an “open anthropology” possible?
                                            |  Jessica De Largy Healy,  Monica Heintz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 32| Real-Time Repatriation: Data Governance for Social Anthropology in
the Twenty-First Century
                                            |  James. W. W Rose
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 46| When physical anthropological “specimens” become ancestors again
                                            |  Damiana Otoiu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 61| Ethnologist, spy, apprentice
                                            |  Julie Cayla
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 63 to 77| What changes when an object changes hands?
                                            |  Renaud Chantraine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 88| Doing the Underdog Research: Ethics, Trust, Friendship
                                            |  Aimar Ventsel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 98| From self-criticism to facial recognition
                                            |  Sabine Trebinjac
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 113| Anthropological investigations under the scrutiny of&#160;research
ethics committees
                                            |  Baptiste Moutaud,  Anthony Stavrianakis,  Monica Heintz,  Jessica De Largy Healy,  Monica Heintz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 117| Jerome W. Crowder, Mike Fortun, Rachel Besara and Lindsay Poirier
(eds.)<i>Anthropological Data in the Digital Age: New
Possibilities, New Challenges</i> Cham, Palgrave Macmillan, 2020,
270&#160;p.
                                            |  Charlotte Gruson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 119| Hannah Turner. <i>Cataloguing Culture: Legacies of Colonialism in
Museum Documentation</i>Vancouver/Toronto, University of British
Columbia Press, 2020, 243&#160;p.
                                            |  Andreea Broască
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 119 to 121| Felicity Bodenstein, Damiana Oţoiu and Eva-Maria Troelenberg
(eds.)<i>Contested Holdings. Museum Collections in Political,
Epistemic and Artistic Processes of Return</i> New York/Oxford,
Berghahn, 2022, 293&#160;p.
                                            |  Garance Nyssen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 124| Katja Müller. <i>Digital Archives and Collections: Creating Online
Access to Cultural Heritage</i> Oxford/New York, Berghahn, coll.
“Anthropology of Media”, 11, 2021, 253&#160;p.
                                            |  Hélène Trébuchet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 138| From “you” to “us”: The influence of the senses in the construction
of a foster family
                                            |  Alice Anton
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 154| Attaining legitimacy in rural areas: Power dynamics and identities
in neo-rural settlements in Ariège and the Massif central
                                            |  Madeleine Sallustio,  Benjamin Dubertrand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 159| Fabre variations
                                            |  Laurent Le Gall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 163| Bernadette Lizet. <i>Le cheval en robe de mariée. Des marchands de
chevaux en France. 1880-1980</i> Paris, CNRS Éditions, 2024, 394
pp. with photo booklet
                                            |  Philippe Bonnin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 165| Mariann Vaczi and Alan Bairner (eds.), <i>Indigenous, Traditional
and Folk Sports. Contesting Modernities</i>, Londres/New York,
Routledge, coll. “Routledge Research in Sport, Culture and
Society”, 2024, 286 p.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 167| Hélène Artaud. <i>Immersion. Rencontre des mondes atlantique et
pacifique</i>, Paris, CNRS Éditions, 2023, 304 pp.
                                            |  Lucie Fortun,  Nadège Legroux,  Manon Airaud,  Lorena Cisneros
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 167 to 170| Jérôme Beauchez. <i>Les sauvages de la civilisation. Regards sur la
Zone, d’hier à aujourd’hui</i>, Paris, Éditions Amsterdam, 2022,
464 pp.
                                            |  Océane de Oliveira
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_241</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2024/1 Vol. 54)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2024-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-02-26T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2024-03-15T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Michèle Baussant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 19| Fighting the enemy within. How environmental activists are getting
intimate with capitalism
                                            |  Jocelyn Lachance
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 33| Feeling the practice of Brazilian jiujitsu: A sensory ethnography
                                            |  Josselin Mattont
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 53| When rolling up your sleeves reveals your history: The new male
face of public Islam in Turkey and the use of “clip-objects” as
tokens of faith
                                            |  Ozan Félix Sousbois
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 69| The holy alliance. Rekindled interest in Islamic tradition among
immigrants and their children in French housing estates
                                            |  Hamza Esmili
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 86| The enduring memory of the survival of a Jewish family during the
Occupation
                                            |  Jean-Marc Dreyfus
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 103| Krakow-Paris-Maghreb-Cracow: Circulations, images, and uses of a
hand. An ego-history.
                                            |  Ewa Tartakowsky
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 116| The invention of the “Kumba age.” How did people’s age become so
fluid in Cameroon?
                                            |  Georges Macaire Eyenga
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 133| Identity politics on the local and global scale: Transgender
mobilization in Tonga (South Pacific)
                                            |  Niko Besnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 136 to 138| Jean-René Trochet, <i>L’Europe avant l’État. Tribus, clans et
voisinage en Europe. De l’Antiquité au
XX<sup>e</sup>&#160;siècle</i>, Rennes, Presses universitaires de
Rennes, coll. “Histoire”, 2022, 402&#160;pp.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 138 to 140| Guy Latry, <i>Une vie de Félix Arnaudin</i>, Bordeaux, Éditions
Confluences, coll. “Stèles”, 2022, 133&#160;p.
                                            |  Jean-Marie Privat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 140 to 142| Nathan Schlanger, <i>L’Invention de la technologie. Une histoire
intellectuelle avec André Leroi-Gourhan</i>, Paris, Puf, 2023,
460&#160;pp.
                                            |  Nicolas Adell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 142 to 144| Benoît Carteron, <i>Du quartier au Pays. Sociabilités
pluriculturelles et appartenance en Nouvelle-Calédonie.
Ethnographie de Katiramona-Nondué (Dumbéa)</i>, Nouméa, Presses
universitaires de Nouvelle-Calédonie, 2020.
                                            |  Martin de La Soudière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 144 to 146| Christian Bromberger, <i>Passion football. Anthropologie d’une
pratique et d’un spectacle</i>, Grâne, Créaphis Éditions, 2022,
173&#160;pp.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 146 to 147| Octave Debary, <i>Les Fantômes de Christian Boltanski</i>, Grâne,
Créaphis Éditions, 2023, 95&#160;pp.
                                            |  Nicolas Adell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 150| Jean-Claude Kaufmann, <i>Petite philosophie de la chaussette</i>,
Paris, Buchet/Chastel, Libella, 2022, 224&#160;pp.
                                            |  Gaëtan Mangin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 150 to 153| Reply from Alessandro Testa to Laurent-Sébastien Fournier on the
review of <i>Rituality and Social (Dis)order</i>, 2020, published
in <i>Ethnologie française</i>, 2022, 52 (3): 550 to 552.
                                            |  Alessandro Testa
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_233</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Aesthetic practices: sharing, transmissions and socialities
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2023/3 Vol. 53)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2023-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-11-08T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2023-11-30T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 385 to 387| Tribute
                                            |  Patrick Prado,  Jean-Noël Retière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 389 to 401| Aesthetic practices: building connections through appearance care
                                            |  Eva Carpigo,  Helena Prado
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 402 to 420| Sharing and transmission on hair care “pasa” in Havana
                                            |  Elena Zapponi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 421 to 429| Be fancy: socialization to an aesthetic sophistication among women
living in a College town (USA)
                                            |  Marie Melody Vidal
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 431 to 448| Manage “the spirit of costume”: learn and embrace tradition in the
pays d’Arles
                                            |  Elise Marcia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 449 to 467| The <i>Muscolosi</i>’s Style: Ethnography of the Muccassassina in
Rome
                                            |  Riccardo Sarlo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 469 to 482| Dietary and sports practices in single-sex fitness centers:
Transmission, sharing, and appropriation
                                            |  Cindy Louchet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 483 to 495| Contemporary processes of learning to sew the deel at a public
university in Ulaanbaatar (Mongolia)
                                            |  Isaline Saunier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 497 to 508| Connecting to “regain self-esteem”. A Portugal-based tontine for
transnational beauty treatments
                                            |  Helena Prado
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 509 to 522| What to do with free stuff? The case of food surpluses
                                            |  Gauthier Bayle
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 523 to 539| Silence, the brain and music: a biologist, an anthropologist, an
investigation
                                            |  Pierre Legrain,  Daniela Lucero
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 541 to 542| Salvatore Viale, <i>Coutumes et mœurs des Corses. Études
critiques</i>, Ajaccio, Éditions Albiana, coll. “Isule litterarie”,
translated from the Italian by Ghjacumu Thiers, (1850) 2021, 248 p.
                                            |  Martin de La Soudière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 543 to 545| Patrick Williams, <i>Tsiganes ou ces inconnus qu’on appelle aussi
Gitans, Bohémiens, Roms, Gypsies, Manouches, Rabouins, Gens du
voyage…</i>, Paris, Puf, 2022, 601 p.
                                            |  Bernard Formoso
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 545 to 552| Bernard Hours, <i>De l’ORSTOM à l’IRD. De la colonie à l’agenda
global</i>, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2020, 141p. Laurent Vidal, <i>Si
belle en son miroir&#160;? Singularités et marginalisations de
l’anthropologie</i>, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes,
2021, 172&#160;p.
                                            |  Jean Copans
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 552 to 554| Pauline Blum, Jean-Marc Goudet and Florence Weber (eds.),
<i>Troubles psychiques en milieu scolaire. Que fait
l’école&#160;?</i>, Éditions Rue d’Ulm, “colle. Sciences sociales”,
2022, 284 p.
                                            |  Charlotte Goetgheluck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 554 to 556| Lucie Nayak, <i>Sexualité et handicap mental. L’ère de la
«&#160;santé sexuelle&#160;»</i>, Paris, Éditions de l’INS HEA/
Champ social, 2017, 516 p.
                                            |  Margot Grandsire
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_232</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        What is a flag?
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2023/2 Vol. 53)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2023-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-07-19T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2023-07-31T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 176| These flags that look at us
                                            |  Philippe Lagadec,  Laurent Le Gall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 194| The fabric of Belarus Ordinary, symbolic and political uses of
flags in the 2020 protests
                                            |  Ronan Hervouet,  Alexandre Kurilo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 210| Banning the Pope’s flag (c. 1910). Symbolic practices and
reflexivity in action
                                            |  Christophe Granger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 211 to 228| Witnesses of the struggle? The Flag of the Landless Movement in the
test of the political crisis in Northeast Brazil
                                            |  David Simbsler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 229 to 238| “In honour of the flag.”Centrality and ambivalences in the
attachment to the flag(s) in military training
                                            |  Jeanne Teboul
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 239 to 253| Artefacts of national subversion: the flag as a critical presence –
or a disturbing absence – in contemporary visual art
                                            |  Ana Dević,  Peter Vermeersch
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 255 to 269| Identifying the vexillary representations of a ruler (Thiers, 29st
November 1832). An approach to overcome the manipulative biases of
political speech.
                                            |  David Descamps,  Agathe Foudi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 271 to 287| The Roma/Gypsy flag: invention, distribution, perception, uses
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Cavaillé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 289 to 311| Two flags, one people? Symbolism put to the test of politics in
Kanaky-New Caledonia
                                            |  Benoît Carteron,  Umberto Cugola,  Caroline Graille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 313 to 322| The historian and the flag. What to do with a “dangerous” object?
Interview with Michel Pastoureau
                                            |  Michel Pastoureau,  Philippe Lagadec,  Laurent Le Gall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 323 to 325| Pascal Ory, <i>Qu’est-ce qu’une nation&#160;? Une histoire
mondiale</i>, Paris, Gallimard, 2020, 464 p.
                                            |  André Rousseau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 325 to 329| Javier Moreno Luzón and Xosé Manuel Nuñez Seixas, <i>Los Colores de
la patria. Símbolos nacionales en la España contemporánea</i>,
Madrid, Tecnos, 2017, 452 p.
                                            |  Benoît Pellistrandi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 329 to 333| On “banal nationalism”, its derivatives and its critiques
                                            |  Salim Chena
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 335 to 346| Tribute to Latour
                                            |  Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 347 to 363| Chronicles of a mobile medico-spatial support team for the
education of children with disabilities (Émas): ethnography of
public policy of inclusive education in the making
                                            |  Godefroy Lansade
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 365 to 368| Éléonore Devevey, <i>Terrains d’entente. Anthropologues et
écrivains dans la seconde moitié du XX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i>,
Dijon, Les presses du réel, 2021, 464 p.
                                            |  Isaac Desarthe
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 368 to 369| Bernard Traimond, <i>Les Chasses aux sangliers. Se confronter au
sauvage</i>, Morlaás, Éditions du Cairn, 2021, 106 p.
                                            |  Julie Campagne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 369 to 371| Corinne Donzaud (textes et photographies de), Sainte-Croix-à-Lauze
au travail, Autoédition,
corinne.donzaud@universite-paris-saclay.fr, 2019, 218 p et Corinne
Donzaud, Les Forains du marché de Reillanne, Monographie d’un
marché de Haute-Provence au début du XXI<sup>e</sup> siècle,
Autoédition, corinne.donzaud@universite-paris-saclay.fr, 2022, 280
                                            |  Jean Benoist
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 371 to 373| Valérie Aubourg et Benjamin Vanderlick, <i>Dieu Merci, Expressions
catholiques africaines et créoles</i>, Lyon, Éditions Libel, 2021,
140 p.
                                            |  Laure Montarry
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 373 to 374| Patrick Rollier, <i>Arménie, Année zéro</i>, Paris, Éditions d’une
rive à l’autre, 2020, 103 p.
                                            |  Marie-Luce Gélard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 375 to 378| Daniel Knight, <i>Vertiginous Life. An Anthropology of Time and the
Unforeseen</i>, Berghahn, 2021, 163p.
                                            |  Maria Couroucli
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_231</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Nouveaux répertoires de spiritualité(s) à l’épreuve des terrains
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2023/1 Vol. 53)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/revue-ethnologie-francaise-2023-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-02-22T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2023-03-20T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Notion protéiforme, née dans le creuset de la religion, où elle
incarnait la face subjective de l’expérience du sacré, la
spiritualité poursuit actuellement sa trajectoire historique en
débordant les frontières pratiques et sémantiques dans lesquelles
elle se déployait habituellement. L’inflation actuelle du terme et
son inattendue résonnance dans une multitude de domaines loin des
traditions sacrées (santé, sport, écologie, économie) suppose qu’on
prenne au sérieux ces quêtes de sens hors religion ou en marge de
celles-ci. C’est à un nouvel examen de l’extension lexicale d’une
notion désormais tout terrain, et à une exploration des nouveaux
modes d’assignation de sens et d’usage au <i>spirituel</i> ou à la
<i>spiritualité</i> que ce numéro spécial invite. Des enquêtes de
terrain menées sur plusieurs continents, dans des contextes sociaux
et culturels différents (de la danse, de l’écologie, du soin, des
utopies et de la méditation) sont autant d’occasions de rendre
compte, sur la base de recherches empiriquement fondées, du
déploiement de ces nouveaux usages et de ces manières de
<i>dire</i> et de <i>faire</i> ce qui relève d’une certaine «
spiritualité ».]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 11| Introduction
                                            |  Lionel Obadia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 24| The act of dancing as a spiritual endeavour: a revelatory
experience shaped by “free-form mindful dances”
                                            |  Marie Mazzella di Bosco
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 36| What lies within the silence of meditation: spirituality?
                                            |  Caroline Nizard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 37 to 51| Eco-Spirituality: Connecting with Earth Beings
                                            |  Jean Chamel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 68| Stories of healing in Ivory Coast: The spoken and unspoken premises
of spirituality
                                            |  Boris Koenig,  Marie Nathalie LeBlanc
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 81| The normalization of spirituality and the humanization of care: the
case of spiritual care workers in Quebec healthcare settings
                                            |  Géraldine Mossière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 98| Beyond “science” and “religion”: bringing the spiritual to life in
Auroville (South India)
                                            |  Lionel Obadia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 102| Matthew Wood, <i>Spiritualité et pouvoir. Les ambiguïtés de
l'autorité religieuse</i>, Geneva, Labor &amp; Fidès, ed. Yannick
Fer, trans. Juliette Galonnier and Gabrielle Angey, 2021, 316 p.
                                            |  Emir Mahieddin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 109| Jean Foyer, Aurélie Choné and Valérie Boisvert (eds.), <i>Les
Esprits Scientifiques. Savoirs et croyances dans les agricultures
alternatives</i>, Grenoble, UGA Éditions, 2022, 330 p.
                                            |  Emma Gobin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 111 to 124| The cradle of subjectivities: for an anthropology of babies at the
creche
                                            |  Paul Luciani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 134| Readers and gleaners on classifieds platforms: two forms of amateur
labor on the second-hand book market
                                            |  Vincent Chabault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 137| Jean-Pierre Digard, <i>Tristes topiques. Souvenirs
anthropologiques, passions et questions</i>, Paris, L’Harmattan,
2021, 197 p.
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 139| Solenne Carof, <i>Grossophobie, sociologie d’une discrimination
invisible</i>, Paris, Édition de la Maison des sciences de l’homme,
2021, 272 p.
                                            |  Maguelone Rouvarel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 142| Marie-Pierre Gibert et Anne Monjaret, <i>Anthropologie du
travail</i>, Paris, Armand Colin, coll. “U”, 2021, 224 p.
                                            |  Emmanuelle Savignac
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 142 to 143| Jean-Paul&#160;Filiod, <i>L’Éducation en partage. Une sociologie
anthropologique du travail éducatif</i>, Louvain-la-Neuve, EME
éditions, coll. “Proximités Sociologie”, 2018, 198&#160;p.
                                            |  Simone Spera
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 146| Ernesto De Martino, <i>Le Monde magique. Prolégomènes à l'étude
d'une formation historique</i>, foreword and translation by
Giordana Charuty, Paris, Bartillat, (1948) 2022, 320 p.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 146 to 148| Delphine Moraldo, <i>L’Esprit de l’alpinisme. Une sociologie de
l’excellence du XIXe au XXe siècle</i>, Lyon, ENS Editions, 2021,
371 p.
                                            |  Marie Buscatto
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 148 to 149| Patrick Gaboriau et Christian Ghasarian, <i>Le Virus, le pouvoir et
le sens</i>, Paris, L’Harmattan, coll. “Logiques sociales”, 2020,
204&#160;p.
                                            |  Noël Jouenne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 151| Anne Monjaret, <i>La Pin-up à l’atelier. Ethnographie d’un rapport
de genre</i>, Paris, CREAPHIS Editions, 2020, ill., 144 p.
                                            |  Jean-Marie Privat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 152| Charles Stépanoff, <i>Voyager dans l’invisible. Techniques
chamaniques de l’imagination</i>, Paris, Éditions La Découverte,
2019, 465 p.
                                            |  Pierre Peraldi-Mittelette
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_223</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        "Faire varia"
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2022/3 Vol. 52)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2022-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-12-07T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2022-12-16T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Un peu comme en musique, «&#160;Faire varia&#160;» relève à la fois
du procédé de la composition et de l’improvisation. Composition
tout d’abord, parce qu’il assemble des contributions variées&#160;:
de la nostalgie des frontières à partir de l’exemple franco-belge
(Daffe et Clément), aux processus de politisation de la terre en
Italie (Apostoli Cappello), à l’ethnographie de séries télévisées
populaires (Truong), aux mobilités transnationales des danseuses et
des danseurs professionnel·le·s (Debonneville), en passant par le
sens social du célibat masculin (Cacciari) ou par les trajectoires
incertaines du patrimoine matériel et du patrimoine culturel
immatériel en Picardie (Barthélemy et Istasse). S’y ajoute en forme
d’hommage à l’Ukraine, un retour sur le numéro consacré à cette
dernière en 2004, sous la direction de Jean Cuisenier, avec une
sélection de trois textes - «&#160;Aux marges de l’Europe,
l’Ukraine&#160;» (Cuisenier et Conte), «&#160;La famine en Ukraine
(1932-1933)&#160;» (Boryssenko), et «&#160;L’Église, facteur
d’évolution ethnoculturelle du peuple ukrainien au xxe
siècle&#160;» (Bondarenko) – et leur lecture rétrospective pour
réfléchir (à) la situation actuelle en Ukraine et plus largement en
Europe (Baussant et Dassié). «&#160;Improvisation&#160;» ensuite
parce que ce numéro est né d’une situation tout à fait inédite pour
la revue, venant remplacer un autre numéro initialement programmé,
un imprévu saisi comme une opportunité pour réfléchir à
l’engagement et à la confiance sur lesquels repose le travail
éditorial et scientifique de la revue.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 437 to 439| Editorial
                                            |  Michèle Baussant,  Stefan Le Courant,  Maria Couroucli,  Nathalie Luca
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 441 to 456| Nostalgia for borders and the formation of a “heritage of
crossing”. Negotiations and ordinary adaptations at the
Franco-Belgian border
                                            |  Laurie Daffe,  Garance Clément
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 457 to 471| Lasting in crime and on screenA moral ethnography of four popular
TV series
                                            |  Fabien Truong
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 473 to 486| “A life in transit”: contemporary dance through seen through the
perspective of mobility
                                            |  Julien Debonneville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 487 to 503| Polysemy, emancipation and nostalgia in two processes of
politicisation of land in Northern Italy
                                            |  Elena Apostoli Cappello
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 505 to 524| The social “meaning” of celibacy
                                            |  Joseph Cacciari
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 525 to 541| From tangible to intangible cultural heritage in Picardy: the
failures of a bottom-up approach?
                                            |  Tiphaine Barthelemy,  Manon Istasse
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 543 to 544| Jean-François Bayart, <i>et al</i>. (eds.), <i>Pour Fariba Adelkhah
et Roland Marchal- Chercheurs en périls</i>, Paris, Sciences Po Les
presses, 2020, 110&#160;p.
                                            |  Jean Copans
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 544 to 547| Philippe Artières, <i>Le Peuple du Larzac. Une histoire de crânes,
sorcières, croisés, paysans, prisonniers, soldats, ouvrières,
militants, touristes et brebis</i> Paris, La Découverte, 2021, 304
p.
                                            |  Jean-Luc Bonniol
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 547 to 548| Laurent Amiotte-Suchet, <i>Frères de douleur. Récit d’un ethnologue
en pèlerinage à Lourdes</i>, Neuchâtel, Editions Livréo-Alphil,
2021, 200&#160;p.
                                            |  Marlène Albert Llorca
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 548 to 549| Marc Grodwohl (in collaboration with François Hengy and Christine
Verry), <i>Les Villageois de Lutter en leurs demeures</i>, Tome II.
Des visages aux fenêtres, 1450-1630, Hégenheim, Cercle d'Histoire
de Hégenheim, coll. “Les inédits du Sundgau”, 2020, 200 p.
                                            |  Jean-René Trochet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 550 to 552| Alessandro Testa, <i>Rituality and Social (Dis)order. The
Historical Anthropology of Popular Carnival in Europe</i>, New
York, Routledge, 2021, 234 p.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 552 to 553| Marie-Christine Pouchelle, <i>Essais d’anthropologie
hospitalière</i>, Paris, Seli Arlsan, 2019, 177 p.
                                            |  Nicoletta Diasio
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 553 to 555| Paul Mercier, <i>Dakar dans les années 1950</i>, Edited and with a
postface by Jean Copans, foreword by Jean-Luc Bonniol, Paris,
Éditions du CTHS, 2021, 335 p.
                                            |  Francis Dupuy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 555 to 557| Tassadit Yacine, <i>Femmes berbères de part et d’autre de la
Méditerranée. Domination, subjectivité et subversion symbolique</i>
Vulaines-sur-Seine, Éditions du Croquant, 2018, 350 p.
                                            |  Pierre Peraldi-Mittelette
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 559 to 562| Retroprojector: another look at Ukraine
                                            |  Michèle Baussant,  Véronique Dassié
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 563 to 571| On the edge of Europe, Ukraine
                                            |  Jean Cuisenier,  Francis Conte
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 573 to 582| Famine in Ukraine (1932-33)
                                            |  Valentyna Boryssenko,  Lisa Vapné,  Anne Coldefy-Faucart
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 583 to 590| The Church as a factor of Ukrainian people’s ethnocultural
evolution in the 20th century
                                            |  Galyna Bondarenko,  Zoia Borysiouk
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_222</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Art worlds in mobility
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2022/2 Vol. 52)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2022-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-05-11T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-06-10T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 245 to 260| Translocal art worlds. Mobilities, routes, and conventions
                                            |  Alice Aterianus-Owanga,  Armelle Gaulier,  Cécile Navarro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 261 to 273| Trans-imperial celebrities. On the road with the first Katangese
guitar stars of the 1950s
                                            |  Charlotte Grabli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 275 to 286| Tightening the strings while listening to the world
                                            |  Alfonso Castellanos
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 287 to 301| The Baja Andalusia Flamenco scene in the face of globalisation:
mobility, players, performance
                                            |  Vivien Caubel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 303 to 314| Music from Turkey in France: which music for which public?
                                            |  Talia Bachir-Loopuyt,  Jérôme Cler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 315 to 325| <i>Soy cubano, soy popular</i>: professional and personal
trajectories of Cuban dancers in transnational perspective
                                            |  Ruxandra Ana
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 327 to 338| Imagining a world of choreographic creation in Burkina Faso.
Projects by artists of the diaspora
                                            |  Sarah Andrieu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 339 to 341| Sarah Andrieu, Emmanuelle Olivier (eds.), <i>Création artistique et
imaginaires de la globalisation</i>, Paris, Hermann, 2017,
378&#160;pp.
                                            |  Joanna Menet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 341 to 345| Talia Bachir-Loopuyt, Anne Damon-Guillot (eds.), <i>Une pluralité
audible&#160;? Mondes de musique en contact</i>, Tours, Presses
universitaires François Rabelais, coll.&#160;“Migrations”, 2019,
305&#160;pp.
                                            |  Margaux Lombard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 345 to 348| Timothy D. Taylor, <i>Music in the World: Selected Essays</i>,
Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2017, 243 pp.
                                            |  Émilie Da Lage
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 348 to 349| Marta Amico, <i>La Fabrique d’une musique touarègue&#160;: un son
du désert dans la world music</i>, Paris, Éditions Karthala, 2020,
318&#160;pp.
                                            |  Valentine Salazard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 349 to 353| Christophe Apprill, <i>Les Mondes du Bal</i>, Nanterre, Presses
universitaires de Paris Nanterre, coll. Ethnographies plurielles,
2018, 170 pp.
                                            |  Eléonore Joassin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 353 to 355| Altaïr Despres, <i>Se faire contemporain. Les danseurs africains à
l’épreuve de la mondialisation culturelle</i>, Publications de la
Sorbonne, Paris, 2016, 288&#160;pp.
                                            |  Ana-Laura Rodriguez-Quinones
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 355 to 357| Federica Fratagnoli, Mahalia Lassibille (eds.), <i>Danser
contemporain&#160;: gestes croisés d’Afrique et d’Asie du Sud</i>,
Montpellier, Deuxième époque, 2018, 358&#160;pp.
                                            |  Julien Debonneville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 358 to 380| Being a festival goer at Hellfest. Female passions and
transgressions in a male cultural universe
                                            |  Christophe Guibert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 381 to 395| Lesbian mothers and known donors in France: reflecting on and
negotiating kinship relationships
                                            |  Kévin Lavoie,  Martine Gross,  Isabel Côté
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 397 to 412| Politicizing equipment, equipping autonomy. A survey on self-build
agricultural equipment in France
                                            |  Frédéric Goulet,  Morgan Meyer,  Céline Cardinael
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 415 to 417| Arnaud Dubois, Jean-Baptiste Eczet, Adeline Grand-Clément,
Charlotte Ribeyrol (eds.), <i>Arcs-en-ciel et couleurs. Regards
comparatifs</i>, Paris, CNRS Éditions, 2018, 304&#160;pp.
                                            |  Marie-Luce Gélard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 417 to 418| Camille Schmoll, <i>Les Damnées de la mer. Femmes et frontières en
Méditerranée</i>, Paris, La Découverte, 2020, 248&#160;pp.
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 419 to 422| Anne Raulin, Sepideh Parsapajouh, Marie-Claude Blanc-Chaléard
(eds.), <i>Ces villes-là. Actualité de Colette Pétonnet</i>,
Nanterre, Presses universitaires de Paris Nanterre, 2018,
235&#160;pp.
                                            |  Sophie Chevalier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 422 to 424| Anne Monjaret (ed.), <i>Carrières</i>, Nanterre, Presses
universitaires de Paris Nanterre, coll.&#160;“Ethnographies
plurielles”, 2019, 284&#160;pp.
                                            |  Jean-François Bert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 424 to 426| Sarah Gensburger, Gérôme Truc (eds.), <i>Les Mémoriaux du
13&#160;novembre</i>, Paris, Éditions de l’EHESS, 2020, 282 pp.
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_221</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        (Dis)possessed gestures and know-how
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2022/1 Vol. 52)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Appropriation of gestures and know-how]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2022-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-02-22T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2022-03-17T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 17| Introduction
                                            |  Arnaud Dubois,  Céline Rosselin-Bareille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 18 to 35| Afro hair and “the natural hair movement”: a reappropriated
gesture?
                                            |  Daphné Bédinadé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 37 to 50| Exhibition and visibility of technical gestures. The case of marble
craftsmanship in Tinos
                                            |  Inés Moreno
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 66| Retention or transmission of know-how in West Sahara (Mauriania,
Western Sahara)? Between a heritage “emergency”, social
emancipation and national sovereignty
                                            |  Sébastien Boulay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 76| Sensitive chords. In and out of tune on violin making’s know-how
during fieldwork
                                            |  Baptiste Buob
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 90| When companies appropriate know-how: recourse to the law and
appropriation
                                            |  Christian Bessy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 106| “A Wikipedia of lightweight backpacking”: Open-access know-how in
an online community of practice
                                            |  Eric Boutroy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 124| Waste Picking in Morocco Valuing Bodies, (Discarded) Objects and
<i>Savoir-faire</i>
                                            |  Anna Karin Giannotta
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 141| The glassmaker’s gesture, the clinking of bangles, and the burning
of flesh. The value of know-how, power relations, and the quest for
independence among the Shishgarh of Firozabad
                                            |  Arnaud Kaba
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 157| (De)possession and (in)visibility. The digital metamorphosis of
knowledge and skills training in the Swiss timber construction
industry
                                            |  Hervé Munz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 172| The weaver and the machine. The transmission of know-how and
gestures in art textile factories
                                            |  Flavia Carraro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 175| Baptiste Bacot, Clément Canonne (eds.), Musi<i>[ha]</i>cking&#160;:
Ce que la musique fait au <i>hacking</i> (et inversement),
<i>Volume&#160;! La revue des musiques populaires</i> (16&#160;:
1), 2020
                                            |  Marie-Christine Bureau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 177| Anthea Kraut, <i>Choreographing Copyright: Race, Gender, and
Intellectual Property Rights in American Dance</i>, Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 2015, 336 pp.
                                            |  Sarah Andrieu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 179| Gabriel Galvez-Behar, <i>Posséder la science. La propriété
scientifique au temps du capitalisme industriel</i>, Paris,
Éditions de l’EHESS, 2020, 334&#160;pp.
                                            |  Nicolas Chachereau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 181| Horst Bredekamp, Irene Brückle, Paul Needham (eds.), <i>SNML.
Anatomie d’une contrefaçon</i> [translated from English by
Christophe Lucchese and Arnaud Baignot], Brussels, Zones Sensibles,
Brill, 2020, 144 pp., 120 color ill.
                                            |  Mathieu Quet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 198| Between needles and pins: becoming Gavroche
                                            |  Jérôme Beauchez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 199 to 213| “Releasable”. The ordinary expression of a release from juvenile
prison
                                            |  Laurent Solini
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 215 to 221| Christopher Small, <i>Musiquer. Le sens de l’expérience
musicale</i> [translated from English by Jedediah Sklower, foreword
by Antoine Hennion] Paris, Philarmonie de Paris Éditions, (1998)
2019, 441&#160;pages.
                                            |  Laurent Legrain
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 221 to 224| Frédérique Fogel, <i>Parenté sans papiers</i> La Roche-sur-Yon,
Éditions Dépaysage, préface de François Héran, 2019, 303 pages.
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 224 to 226| Serge Chaumier, Jean-Claude Duclos (eds.), <i>Georges Henri
Rivière, une muséologie humaniste</i>, Paris, Éditions Complicités,
2019, 362 pages.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 226 to 229| Germain Viatte (ed.), <i>Georges Henri Rivière. Voir c’est
comprendre</i> Marseille, MuCEM/Réunion des musées nationaux, 2018,
304 pages
                                            |  François Hubert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 229 to 231| Thomas Parker, <i>Le Goût du terroir. Histoire d’une idée
française</i>, Rennes, Presses universitaires de Rennes, collection
“Table des hommes”, 2017, 260 pages. [Translation of: <i>Tasting
the French Terroir. History of an Idea</i>, Berkeley, University of
California Press, 2015]
                                            |  Alexandra Hondermarck,  Élias Burgel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 231 to 233| Bernard Hours, Monique Selim, <i>L’Empire de la morale</i>, Paris,
L’Harmattan, coll. “Anthropologie critique”, 2020, 224 pages.
                                            |  Noël Jouenne
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_213</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Globalities of wine
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2021/3 Vol. 51)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2021-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-10-05T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-11-23T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 479 to 489| Martine Segalen (1940–2021) in her own words
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 491 to 501| Anthropology of wine: A unique object, between subjectivation and
circulation
                                            |  Chantal Crenn,  Marion Demossier,  Boris-Mathieu Pétric
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 502 to 512| Agronomic creativity and rituals in Swiss vineyards. A study of
multiple commitments in biodynamic viticulture
                                            |  Alexandre Grandjean
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 513 to 522| The emergence of a Chinese wine cluster or a desire to domesticate
the natural world
                                            |  Boris-Mathieu Pétric
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 523 to 534| From wine cellars to wine competitions: The crisis and reinvention
of French sommeliers (from the postwar period to the 1980s)
                                            |  Sénia Fedoul
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 535 to 547| Politics, markets, and wine: Indexing post-Cold War tensions in the
Republic of Moldova
                                            |  Daniela Ana
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 549 to 563| Chinese investors' itineraries in the vineyards of Bordeaux, or the
reversal of the figure of the “foreigner”
                                            |  Chantal Crenn
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 565 to 576| From production to consumption: Ambiguities in the status of wine
in Ramallah
                                            |  Mariangela Gasparotto
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 577 to 587| Making homemade wine, online
                                            |  William Skinner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 589 to 599| Local bubbles: Natural wines between globalization
and&#160;locavorism
                                            |  Clelia Viecelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 601 to 612| Wine GB: Sparkling opportunism in the “New/Old World”?
                                            |  Marion Demossier,  Peter J. Howland
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 613 to 615| Christelle PINEAU, <i>La Corne de vache et le microscope. Le vin
«&#160;nature&#160;», entre sciences, croyances et radicalités</i>,
Paris, La Découverte, 2019, 248 pp.
                                            |  Denis Chartier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 616 to 617| Jean-Louis YENGUE and Kilien STENGEL (eds.), <i>Le Terroir
viticole. Espaces et figures de qualité</i>, Tours, Presses
Universitaires François-Rabelais, coll. Table des Hommes, 2020, 414
pp.
                                            |  Isabelle Bianquis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 617 to 620| Marion DEMOSSIER, <i>Burgundy: A Global Anthropology of Place and
Taste</i>, New York/Oxford, Berghahn, coll. New Directions in
Anthropology, 2018, 258 pp.
                                            |  Bernard Moizo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 621 to 622| Introduction
                                            |  Jean-Luc Poueyto
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 623 to 629| Campsites in the sky
                                            |  Patrick Williams
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 631 to 639| Patrick Williams: A perfect imperfect ethnographer
                                            |  Martin Olivera
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 641 to 651| First, the encounter. Contributions of a <i>romanès</i>
anthropology to general anthropology
                                            |  Stefania Pontrandolfo,  Marco Solimene
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 653 to 663| Patrick Williams—A story of friendship with Auvergne’s Manouche
community
                                            |  Lise Foisneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 665 to 672| Patrick Williams and jazz
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Digard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 673 to 680| Rhapsody in the dark
                                            |  Jean Jamin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 681 to 695| Line inspectors. Ethnography of the gestures of public officials in
abattoirs
                                            |  Amandine Gautier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 697 to 710| Eyes that shape boats
                                            |  Théo Lebouc
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 711 to 712| <i>Introduction to the final review written by Martine Segalen</i>
                                            |  Françoise Zonabend
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 712 to 714| Jean JAMIN, <i>Tableaux d’une exposition. Chronique d’une famille
ardennaise sous la IIIe&#160;République</i>, Paris, Nouvelles
éditions Place, 2021, 213 pp.
                                            |  Martine Segalen,  Françoise Zonabend
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 714 to 715| Martin DE LA SOUDIÈRE, <i>Lignes secondaires</i>, Paris, CREAPHIS
Éditions, 2020, 115 pp.
                                            |  Aline Brochot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 715 to 717| Julien D’HUY, <i>Cosmogonies. La Préhistoire des mythes</i>, Paris,
Éditions La Découverte, coll. «&#160;Sciences Sociales du
Vivant&#160;», 2020, 384 pp.
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 717 to 719| Emmanuel RAQUIN-LORENZI, <i>Le Pays du lac</i>, Paris, Éditions
Loco, 2019, 470 pp.
                                            |  Patrick Prado
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 719 to 720| Colette MILHÉ, <i>Le Mystère de la cagoule. Enquête bolivienne</i>,
Toulouse, Anacharsis, coll. «&#160;Les ethnographiques&#160;»,
2020. 287 pp.
                                            |  Bernard Traimond
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 720 to 721| Bernadette LIZET, <i>Le cheval dans la vie quotidienne</i>, Paris,
CNRS Éditions, 2020, 320 pp.
                                            |  Martin de La Soudière
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_212</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Lebanese anthropologies
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2021/2 Vol. 51)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Between dispersion and common threads]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2021-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-07-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-08-18T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 223 to 224| Maps
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 225 to 225| Transliteration system
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 227 to 238| Introduction
                                            |  Nicolas Puig,  Michel Tabet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 239 to 254| Exploring the Lebanese Intifada of 2019: A sound survey approach
                                            |  Lama Kabbanji,  Elsa El Hachem Kirby
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 255 to 266| Arranged marriage in Beirut’s Sunni community
                                            |  Nizar Hariri,  Dima Tannir
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 267 to 282| Lebanon in a time of “civil love”
                                            |  Michela De Giacometti
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 283 to 298| “Doctor, I want her nose!”: Rhinoplasty, Ethnicity, and the Social
Contexts of Plastic Surgery in Lebanon
                                            |  Nicolas Puig
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 299 to 308| Scenes from Beirut: Agonistic writings
                                            |  Franck Mermier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 309 to 318| Notes on Some Archive Photographs
                                            |  Sophie Brones
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 319 to 332| In the Shatila ‘cocktail’: discourses and narratives on past,
present and future loss
                                            |  Hala Caroline Abou Zaki,  Elsa El Hachem Kirby
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 333 to 346| Syrian janitors in Beirut
                                            |  Leila Drif
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 347 to 361| A life with birds: the ethnography of a passion for pigeon keeping
(Lebanon)
                                            |  Emma Aubin-Boltanski,  Elsa El Hachem Kirby
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 363 to 382| The “Belly of Beirut”
                                            |  Thierry Boissière,  Layane Hajjar,  Alexandre Hajjar
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 383 to 392| God, workers, women, and self: Convergences, accidents, and other
uncertainties in half a century of fieldwork in Lebanon
                                            |  Suad Joseph
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 393 to 399| Readings on the theme: Book Review
                                            |  Candice Raymond,  Elsa El Hachem Kirby
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 400 to 406| Reviews
                                            |  Séverine Gabry-Thienpont,  Elsa El Hachem Kirby
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 407 to 424| Age relations turned upside down? Physical, moral, and
socio-technical challenges in chronic illness
                                            |  Adeline Perrot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 425 to 440| Miction impossible
                                            |  Philippe Steiner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 441 to 455| Reviews
                                            |  Jean Copans
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 456 to 462| Reviews
                                            |  Sandrine Teixido
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 463 to 470| David Berliner. <i>Perdre sa culture</i>, Brussels, Zones
sensibles, 2018, 155 pp., bibl., index.
                                            |  Anath Ariel de Vidas,  Camille Noûs
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 465 to 467| Anne Perrin Khelissa. <i>Luxe intime. Essai sur notre lien aux
objets précieux</i> Paris, Éditions du CTHS, coll. “Format 83”,
2020, 128 pp.
                                            |  Nicolas Adell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 467 to 469| Bernard Charlier. <i>Faces of the wolf. Managing the Human,
Non-human Boundary in Mongolia</i> Leiden/Boston, Brill, 2015,
188&#160;pp.
                                            |  Laurent Legrain
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 469 to 470| Marie Baltazar. <i>Du bruit à la musique. Devenir organiste.</i>
Paris, Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’homme, 2019, 273 pp.
                                            |  Marie Buscatto
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_211</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Fifty years
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2021/1 Vol. 51)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[In fifty words (and a few more)]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2021-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-02-01T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-03-03T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 10| Beginning
                                            |  Nicolas Adell,  Anne Monjaret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 12| English (and its empire)
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 14| Anniversary
                                            |  Sylvie Sagnes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 16| Authors
                                            |  Jean-François Gossiaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 20| Library
                                            |  Laurent Le Gall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 22| Drafts
                                            |  Agnès Jeanjean
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 27| Office(s)
                                            |  Anne Monjaret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 28| Collections
                                            |  Michèle Baussant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 29 to 30| Comparing
                                            |  Nicoletta Diasio
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 32| Knowledge, ignorance, recognition
                                            |  Anne Blanchard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 35| Bodies
                                            |  Gilles Raveneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 37 to 38| Talking about edges
                                            |  Maïté [Vienne] Villacampa
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 40| Issue
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 42| Scales (of analysis)
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 44| School (and its misery)
                                            |  André Burguière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 46| (On)line
                                            |  Sophie Chevalier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 48| In attendance
                                            |  Jean-Yves Durand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 52| Ethnography (from disrepute to return to favor)
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 54| Evaluating
                                            |  Monica Heintz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 57| File
                                            |  Nicolas Adell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 60| Geographers
                                            |  Martin de La Soudière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 62| Final oral exam
                                            |  Laurent Le Gall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 66| Open topic (varia or off-topic?)
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 68| Image
                                            |  Sylvaine Conord
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 70| Infirmary
                                            |  Fabienne Venou Flamant
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 72| In memoriam
                                            |  Tiphaine Barthelemy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 75| Game
                                            |  Thierry Wendling
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 81| Legitimacy (of the object)
                                            |  Gabriel Segré
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 84| Literature(s)
                                            |  Jean-Marie Privat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 87| Words
                                            |  Gisèle Borie
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 91| Museum
                                            |  Gérard Collomb
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 94| National (ethnology . . .)
                                            |  Jean-François Gossiaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 96| Endnote
                                            |  Thierry Wendling
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 98| Object
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 100| Order of the day
                                            |  Jean-Marie Privat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 102| Masthead
                                            |  Vanessa Manceron
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 104| Kinship
                                            |  Françoise Zonabend
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 106| Photography
                                            |  Hervé Jézéquel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 110| Poem, poetry
                                            |  Nicolas Adell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 111 to 112| Politics (of research)
                                            |  Baptiste Buob
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 114| Punctuation in <i>Ethnologie française</i>
                                            |  Sophie Gudin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 116| Editing
                                            |  Anne Monjaret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 118| Refusal
                                            |  Monica Heintz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 119 to 120| Summarizing
                                            |  Gilles Raveneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 124| Journal-Object
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 125| Meaning
                                            |  Marie-Luce Gélard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 128| Sport
                                            |  Niko Besnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 130| Time
                                            |  Nicoletta Diasio
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 132| Translation (interpretation and loyalty)
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 136| Transmitting
                                            |  Tiphaine Barthelemy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 140| Utopia
                                            |  Niko Besnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 142| Varia
                                            |  Sophie Chevalier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 144| Verb
                                            |  Élisabeth Anstett
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 146| seX, seXuality—X-rated
                                            |  Philippe Combessie
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 148| Tribute Christian Mériot (1934–2020)
                                            |  Bernard Traimond
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 160| Composing in the plural
                                            |  Alexandre Robert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 175| Bringing worlds together
                                            |  Sandrine Teixido
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 198| Between profitability and subsistence
                                            |  Glenn Mainguy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 199 to 209| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_203</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Europe 27: Building European citizenship
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2020/3 Vol. 50)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2020-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-09-14T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2020-10-09T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 465 to 466| Tribute
                                            |  Bernard Traimond
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 467 to 468| Tribute
                                            |  François Hubert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 469 to 484| Introduction
                                            |  Monica Heintz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 485 to 500| “Foreigners, you have to make more of an effort to become
Europeans!”: Ethnographies of the State-sponsored Fabrication of
National Indigenousness in Western Europe
                                            |  Emma Barrett Fiedler,  John Angell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 501 to 512| The “Euro-Mediterranean” City: Transnational Difference and
Belonging on the Marseille Waterfront
                                            |  Philip Cartelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 513 to 528| Europe and the rights of indigenous peoples
                                            |  Irène Bellier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 529 to 544| An anthropology of the politics of European Capitals of Culture as
seen from the “margins”: A comparative ethnography of GeNova04,
Marseille-Provence 2013, and Matera-Basilicata 2019
                                            |  Maria Elena Buslacchi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 545 to 558| European citizenship, Italian nationality, and the “institutional
myth” of return: Argentines and Chileans of Italian descent
                                            |  Mélissa Blanchard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 559 to 573| “Brexit is the Graveyard of Post-Industrial Britain”: Ethnography
as Eulogy for East London and England
                                            |  Gillian Evans
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 575 to 580| The European Union and young people: The different perspectives of
a sociologist and a filmmaker
                                            |  Cédric Klapisch,  Anne Muxel,  André Burguière,  Monica Heintz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 581 to 590| Further reading: Reviews
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 591 to 598| Style of play, style of club, style of city? Sentimental education
and mark of urban belonging through football in Marseille and
elsewhere
                                            |  Christian Bromberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 599 to 614| Photographing religious feeling: Stefan Czarnowski in Perros-Guirec
on July 26, 1908
                                            |  Jean-François Bert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 615 to 632| “We remained the troubadours of nature”: On a special relationship
to nature in some gypsy families in Limousin
                                            |  Jean-Pierre Cavaillé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 633 to 640| Review
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 641 to 641| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_202</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Tracing
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2020/2 Vol. 50)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2020-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-04-28T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2020-05-11T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 243 to 250| Science in danger, journals in protest
                                            |   Le collectif des revues en lutte,  Nicolas Adell,  Jean-Yves Bart
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 253 to 255| Tribute
                                            |  Irène Bellier,  Agnès Fine,  Séverine Mathieu,  Noémie Merleau-Ponty,  Irène Théry,  Jean-Paul Zúñiga
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 257 to 268| Introduction
                                            |  Jérôme Courduriès,  Mélanie Gourarier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 269 to 284| Detecting ancestry: The use of genealogical machines and techniques
in the reconstruction of family histories
                                            |  Sarah Abel,  Gísli Pálsson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 285 to 298| Archives of Origins: Traces and Narrative (Dis-) Continuities in
the Files of France’s Child Welfare System, 1995-2015
                                            |  Agnès Martial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 299 to 312| (T)Race. Skin color, a bodily inscription of slavery
                                            |  Jean-Luc Bonniol
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 313 to 326| Investigating one’s own infection: Gay men recently diagnosed with
HIV
                                            |  Mélanie Perez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 327 to 344| Politics of doubt and regimes of truth in the “bone age”: DNA and
the symbolic adoption of bodies recovered from mass graves in Peru
and Spain
                                            |  Dorothée Delacroix,  Camille Noûs
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 345 to 360| On the trail of Mexico’s disappeared
                                            |  Sabrina Melenotte
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 361 to 376| “True” and “false” Ebola survivors? Biological traces and
conflicting evidence in Guinea
                                            |  Alice Desclaux,  Eva Barranca
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 377 to 389| Minor to the bone? Juvenile court judges and the role of bone
testing in determining the age of unaccompanied migrant minors
                                            |  Annalisa Lendaro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 391 to 401| Further reading: Reviews
                                            |  Clara Duterme,  Anne-Sophie Giraud,  Anélie Prudor,  Marie Le Clainche-Piel,  Anaïs Martin,  Nicoletta Diasio
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 403 to 417| The benefit of choice&#160;(?). The status of the in vitro embryo
and the dead fetus in France
                                            |  Anne-Sophie Giraud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 419 to 434| Needs of value. On ethics and tactics in international adoption.
The role of medical conditions in intercountry adoption
                                            |  Sébastien Roux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 435 to 437| Review
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 439 to 452| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_201</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Slave trades and cultural memory
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2020/1 Vol. 50)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2020-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-01-20T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2020-02-28T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 7| Tribute
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 17| Introduction. Visions of the past and the cultural memory of the
slave trades
                                            |  Gaetano Ciarcia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 29| The politics of apology: Official repentance and the strategic
management of guilt in a former slave trade port (Liverpool)
                                            |  Renaud Hourcade
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 50| Between criticism and reconciliation. Controversial memories in
Bordeaux: “The Revenants” art project
                                            |  Francesca Cozzolino
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 64| Memorializing slavery in the public space in the United States: A
selective amnesia?
                                            |  Lawrence Aje
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 76| Tourist visits and hijacking the past on Ouidah’s Slave Route
                                            |  Rossila Goussanou
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 89| History and emotions. The staging of the House of Slaves in Gorée,
Senegal
                                            |  Martin Mourre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 108| Managing the slave past from the old port of Rio de Janeiro
(2010-2019). Public policies, local appropriations, memoryscape
                                            |  Jérôme Souty
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 124| Museumizing the slave trade and slavery in Zanzibar:Truth, untruth,
and uncertainty at the Old Slave Market
                                            |  Marie-Aude Fouéré,  Michael Paul
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 141| Establishing the memory of slavery in Guadeloupe and Nantes: The
contentious issues of memorial donations
                                            |  Gaetano Ciarcia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 156| The opaque glow of the slave past
                                            |  Gaetano Ciarcia,  Lucile Combreau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 157 to 162| Further reading: Review
                                            |  Rocío Munguia Aguilar
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 176| Reviews
                                            |  Lawrence Aje,  Didier Nativel,  Anna Seiderer,  Pauline Guedj,  Morgane Honoré,  María Laura Corvalán
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 192| Age, sex, and generation in the work of ethnologist Denise Paulme
in Côte d’Ivoire in the 1960s
                                            |  Marianne Lemaire
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 210| How to think with actions. Kinds of life and kinds of knowledge in
the anthropology of André Varagnac
                                            |  Frédéric Fruteau de Laclos
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 211 to 222| Review
                                            |  Martine Segalen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 223 to 238| Reviews
                                            |  Sara Le Menestrel,  Georges Augustins,  Jean-Marie Privat,  Marie-Christine Pouchelle,  Marie Salaün,  Sandrine Teixido
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_194</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Self-optimization
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2019/4 Vol. 49)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2019-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2019-09-09T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2019-10-01T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 639 to 651| Introduction
                                            |  Sébastien Dalgalarrondo,  Tristan Fournier,  Rachel Gomme
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 653 to 670| The history of coaching and its moralities (1930–2018)
                                            |  Scarlett Salman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 671 to 686| When sports is put at the service of management: The shaping of the
“high-level employee”
                                            |  Yan Dalla Pria
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 687 to 700| Optimizing one’s beauty, taking aesthetic control of one’s body:
Success and failure in beauty pageants
                                            |  Camille Couvry,  Marion Braizaz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 701 to 718| (Micro)“psychedelic” experiences: From workplace creativity in the
1960s to twenty-first-century neuro-newspeak
                                            |  Milana Aronov
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 719 to 734| Perfectionism through numbers? How self-tracking technologies fit
within individuals’ self-optimization projects
                                            |  Éric Dagiral
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 735 to 750| Food sensitivities and bodily sedition: From vulnerability to a
moral ideal?
                                            |  Virginie Wolff,  John Angell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 751 to 767| Staying on course. Bodies, masculinities, and food practices during
the “critical age”
                                            |  Nicoletta Diasio,  Vulca Fidolini
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 769 to 786| Veganism: Abolition through nutrition. Vitamin B<sub>12</sub>
supplements for the vegan diet
                                            |  Sébastien Mouret,  John Angell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 787 to 801| “Liberation! A true liberation!”: Being childfree and sterilized
                                            |  Emma Tillich,  John Angell
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 803 to 812| Health care professionals “coming out”: A critical dialogue
                                            |  John Coveney,  Lee Thompson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 813 to 819| Edgar Cabanas and Eva Illouz, <i>Happycratie. Comment l’industrie
du bonheur a pris le contrôle de nos vies</i>, Paris, Premier
Parallèle, 2018, 260&#160;p.
                                            |  Sabine Mégarbané
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 820 to 826| Céline Lafontaine, <i>Le Corps-marché. La marchandisation de la vie
humaine à l’ère de la bioéconomie</i>, Paris, Seuil, 2014,
288&#160;p.
                                            |  Pierre Wiltz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 827 to 837| Reviews
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 839 to 853| Battle! The pastoral or the world scene in the Western Pyrénées
                                            |  Patricia Heiniger-Castéret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 855 to 877| “They may not have been ducks.” The anthropologist put to the test
of intersubjectivity
                                            |  Anath Ariel de Vidas
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_ETHN_193</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        “Doesn’t even hurt!”
                    | Ethnologie française
            (2019/3 Vol. 49)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Mock combat and the celebratory aestheticization of violence]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-ethnologie-francaise-2019-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2019-06-07T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2019-06-19T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 453 to 454| Tribute
                                            |  Jean-Paul Willaime
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 455 to 462| Introduction
                                            |  Laurent Sébastien Fournier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 463 to 476| The Sardinian <i>murra</i>: A duel with no contact
                                            |  Élisabeth Euvrard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 477 to 492| The great sport-spectacle. The transformations of television
wrestling: France and the USA (1958–2018)
                                            |  Christophe Lamoureux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 493 to 506| A history of violence. The ritual reenactment of the capture of the
Incas in the Central Andes
                                            |  Isabel Yaya McKenzie
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 507 to 521| Faire l’Ours. The game, aim, and limits of mimesis
                                            |  Claudie Voisenat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 523 to 532| Hitting too hard? Pillow fights: Defining violence and the rules of
interaction
                                            |  Gaëlle Chartier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 533 to 548| “It’s real!”: On some cases of virtual violence and ritual efficacy
in BDSM communities
                                            |  Adrien Czuser
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 549 to 567| Pogoing: Playful or violent? Punk, pogo, and mock combat
                                            |  Luc Robène,  Manuel Roux,  Solveig Serre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 569 to 579| Further reading
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 581 to 596| Industrial waste sorters: An essential part of the circular economy
in search of recognition
                                            |  Linda Gonzalez-Lafaysse
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 597 to 616| Gaps in the record: The scribbles, notebooks, and drafts of
Germaine Tillion
                                            |  Jérôme Lamy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 617 to 630| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
    </feed>
