Liste des résultats
Il y a 7 éléments qui correspondent à vos termes de recherche.
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Rencontre avec Thomas Chatterton Williams autour de son livre Self-Portrait in Black and White: Unlearning Race (2019)
par Thomas Chatterton Wiliams,
publié le 24/06/2021
- Des élèves de première et terminale du lycée Blaise Pascal à Charbonnières-les-Bains ont rencontré l'auteur Thomas Chatterton Williams dans le cadre du Littérature Live Festival de la Villa Gillet. Des groupes qui suivent l'enseignement de spécialité LLCER anglais et LLCER anglais monde contemporain, ainsi que des groupes de la section européenne anglais, ont pu échanger avec l'auteur autour de son livre Self-Portrait in Black and White: Unlearning Race, paru en 2019.
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Brigitte Gauthier : Les écoles de cinéma américaines
par Brigitte Gauthier,
publié le 08/10/2015
- Professeur à l’Université d’Evry, Brigitte Gauthier dirige le laboratoire de recherche SLAM (Synergies Langues Arts Musique), l’axe SCRIPT et le Master Langues et Image. Elle nous parle de son ouvrage L'enseignement du cinéma aux Etats-Unis, dans lequel elle détaille l'historique des formations proposées par les grandes écoles de cinéma américaines, ainsi que les spécificités de leurs cultures cinématographiques.
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The black community in New York, past and present
par Alondra Nelson, Clifford Armion,
publié le 15/01/2013
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Alondra Nelson tells us about the history of the black community in New York; where they came from, where they settled and why. She also explores issues related to the urban development in Manhattan and to the gentrification of Harlem.
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Reclaiming the streets, public space and quality of life in New York
par Janette Sadik-Khan, Clifford Armion,
publié le 11/01/2013
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Mayor Bloomberg’s PlaNYC initiative was a thirty year plan to say ‘what do we need to do to ensure that a 9.4 million New York City works better than an 8.4 million New York City works today?’ so that when you open the door in the year 2030 you like what you see. That long term planning view, understanding the growth that’s going to happen, meant that we needed to change some fundamental things. One of the first things we needed to do was to look at our transport systems differently and use the lever of growth to modernise those transport systems.
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Understanding the social media: an interview with Jeffrey Rosen
par Jeffrey Rosen, Clifford Armion,
publié le 10/01/2013
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Now that we’re living most of our lives online, all of us are vulnerable to the internet. The difficulty with young people is that they may not have experienced the dangers of not being able to escape your past until it’s too late. I like to tell the story of Stacy Sneider, the young 22 year old teacher in training who posted a picture of herself on Myspace wearing a pirate’s hat and drinking from a plastic cup that said drunken pirate. Her supervisor at the school said she was promoting drinking and she was fired. She sued and was unable to get her job back and she had to pick an entirely different career. That’s a very dramatic example on how vulnerable all of us are to being judged out of context by a single image or ill chosen picture and once you do that it may be very hard to escape your past.
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Questions d'urbanisme à New York
par Michel Lussault, Clifford Armion,
publié le 29/11/2012
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Michel Lussault, professeur de géographie et directeur de l'Istitut Français d'Education, répond aux questions de Clifford Armion, responsable de La Clé des langues, dans le cadre d'une rencontre organisée par la Villa Gillet dans les locaux newyorkais du Guardian, le 13 octobre 2012. Il évoque les changements opérés dans le paysage urbain de New York ces dernières années aux travers d'exemples comme la reconfiguration de Time Square, la transformation de la High Line en promenade ou bien encore le mémorial du 11 septembre.
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The 9/11 memorial - Interview and footage of the WTC site
par Clifford Chanin, Clifford Armion,
publié le 30/10/2012
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The original World Trade Centre site was 16 acres which if my calculations are correct is about 10 hectares in French geographical terms. So it was a very large space in the centre of the downtown Wall Street business district in New York. Those two buildings were each 110 stories tall. Each floor was an acre square. So you had 10 million square feet of floor space in those buildings. It really was an attempt to build the largest buildings in the world and bring companies from around the world to do business in those buildings. Once the attacks came and the buildings collapsed, it emerged very quickly in the planning process that the actual footprints of the buildings, those places were the they stood, were considered sacred ground.