Dernières publications
William Hogarth - «Twelve prints of Hudibras»
publié le 20/12/2012
Reproduction commentée de la série des ((Hudibras plates)) du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
William Hogarth - «Large Masquerade Ticket»
publié le 20/12/2012
Reproduction commentée de l'oeuvre ((Large Masquerade Ticket)) du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
Not Looking for Love
Chris Kraus - publié le 17/12/2012
What is particular about women’s depiction of sex and sexuality and why are these portrayals held to different social and aesthetic standards than those by men?
For another Hysterature
Emilie Notéris - publié le 17/12/2012
Since the question of women’s freedom in writing, or “Why stories of transgression or women’s assertions of freedom are less tolerated than those of men?” only highlight ordinary male chauvinism (the answer to the question is undeniably related to cultural issues), I prefer to focus on the counter strategies that can be deployed in response to the insults made to women, like the one Eileen Myles describes in her introduction to I love Dick by Chris Kraus, What about Chris?: “She’s (...)
The Words of the Flesh
Wendy Delorme - publié le 11/12/2012
Impressions of women’s writing, women artists, and of all those who create with a vagina, without necessarily using it.
Declaration of Disinclinations
Lynne Tillman - publié le 11/12/2012
"The term “woman” is a construction. The French know well that Simone DeBeauvoir wrote, way back in the 1940s, in The Second Sex, “Woman is not born, she is made.”"
Some thoughts on silence and the contemporary “investigative memoir”
Marco Roth - publié le 06/12/2012
Critics and readers, at least in the United States, seem to be slower to recognize the investigative memoir as a narrative mode deserving of attention as such. The American memoir comes burdened with a history of survivor’s tales and evangelical Protestant redemption stories: the writer is usually delivered from bondage: slavery or captivity in the 19th century, Communism, Nazi Europe, or “substance abuse” in the 20th, and into freedom or the light of truth. THE END. Testifying, in both (...)
Video game theory
Liel Leibovtiz, Claire Richard - publié le 05/12/2012
TV requires you to interpret, to find meaning, to reject meaning, to make up new meaning, to negociate. Video games aren’t like that. Video games require you to do something else. You turn on a video game, and immediately you exist in three separate forms : you are that self on the couch, sitting in the physical space, watching the TV, holding the remote in your hand, you are the avatar on the screen, the character which you control and manipulate, and you’re a sort of third entity, an (...)
Questions d'urbanisme à New York
Michel Lussault, Clifford Armion - publié le 29/11/2012
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 (...)
William Hogarth - «Royalty, Episcopacy, and Law»
publié le 27/11/2012
Reproduction commentée de l'oeuvre ((Royalty, Episcopacy, and Law)) du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
William Hogarth - «Masquerades and Operas, Burlington-gate»
publié le 27/11/2012
Reproduction commentée de l'oeuvre ((Masquerades and Operas. Burlington-gate)) du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
William Hogarth - «An emblematic print on the South Sea» and «The Lottery»
publié le 27/11/2012
Reproductions commentées de deux oeuvres du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
William Hogarth - «Altar-Piece at St. Clement's»
publié le 27/11/2012
Reproduction commentée de l'oeuvre ((Altar-Piece at St. Clement's)) du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
Title page of the Nichols edition
publié le 23/11/2012
Reproduction de la page de titre de l'édition Nichols des oeuvres du graveur anglais William Hogarth.
What Does a New Yorker Think When He Bites into a Hamburger?
Caroline Heinrich - publié le 20/11/2012
"What do you think of when you bite into a hamburger? Mmm, how delicious? Oh boy, this is bad for me? Or: I hope I won’t make a mess. Or perhaps you don’t want to think about anything at all? Maybe you are just thinking, “What a crazy question!”? Or are you trying to figure out what this crazy question has to do with philosophy and, particularly, with Baudrillard’s thought?"
The cultural perception of the American land: a short history
Mireille Chambon-Pernet - publié le 20/11/2012
The importance of land and nature in the American culture is widely known. The Pilgrim Fathers who landed on the coast of the Massachussetts in 1620 were looking for freedom which was both spiritual and material. The latter derived from land ownership, as a landowner called no man master. Yet, in 1893, Jackson Turner announced that: “the American character did not spring full-blown from the Mayflower” “ It came out of the forests and gained new strength each time it touched a frontier”.
Reportage sur Martin Parr
publié le 20/11/2012
Un reportage réalisé par ENS Média à l'occasion de l'exposition "Life's a beach" à la Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon.
The 9/11 memorial - Interview and footage of the WTC site
Clifford Chanin, Clifford Armion - publié le 30/10/2012
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 (...)
Prosodie et correction phonétique
Stephan Wilhelm - publié le 23/10/2012
Selon le cadre dans lequel chacun évolue, on peut avoir diverses conceptions de la correction phonétique. Pour l’enfant qui acquiert sa langue maternelle, cette notion (bien imprécise, sans doute) sera différente de celle qu’entretient celui qui découvre l’anglais en tant que langue étrangère. Pour l’apprenant de niveau avancé (notamment pour les candidats aux concours de recrutements de professeurs ou les enseignants d’anglais d’origine non-anglophone), un degré élevé de (...)

Principes fondamentaux de l’intonation
Natalie Mandon - publié le 03/10/2012
Cette partie du précis d'anglais oral, consacrée à la chaîne parlée, explicite les principes fondamentaux de l'intonation.

Phénomènes accentuels et rythmiques
Natalie Mandon - publié le 03/10/2012
Cette partie du précis d'anglais oral, consacrée à la chaîne parlée, aborde la question des phénomènes accentuels et rythmiques.
Biographical essay on the genius and works of Hogarth
Clifford Armion - publié le 27/09/2012
So much has already been written respecting the illustrious Artist who is the subject of the present memoir, that, were it not intended as a necessary accompaniment to this Edition of his works, a sketch of his life might seem to require some apology. It is not here professed to bring forward additional facts, but rather to examine generally his peculiar merits as an Artist, and to exhibit, within a moderate compass, the opinions of his various Commentators; connecting this criticism with such a (...)
"Life's a Beach" de Martin Parr - Préambule de David Gauthier
David Gauthier - publié le 25/09/2012
Dans le cadre de l'exposition Life's a Beach à la Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon et du festival "Rencontres 2012 de la photographie Lyon sur la Méditerranée", Martin Parr s'est rendu à l'ENS à l'invitation de David Gauthier, chargé de Mission Images et responsable des Affaires culturelles de l'école.

Regard sur un cliché de Martin Parr, «The Great Indoors», 1996
Maxime Roccisano - publié le 21/09/2012
"Elle nous parle de nous parce que nous avons tous des images déjà faites de plage, vues dans des magazines chez son dentiste, vues à la télé, vues en "vrai". Son côté bizarre, le fond peint et le faux promontoire avec son palmier en plastique (même la lumière fait fausse!), nous interpelle et nous met dans une position d'attente. Que se passe-t-il? Pourquoi est-ce que ces gens regardent tous dans la même direction? Peu importe finalement, ce qui compte, c'est ce que cette image nous (...)
"I’m the antidote to propaganda": A conversation with Martin Parr
Marie Gautier, Aurore Fossard - publié le 21/09/2012
"Well I like bright colours. I took the palette that was used for commercial photography, especially in advertising and fashion, and I applied that to the art world because I’m fundamentally trying to create entertainment in my photographs. The idea is to make them bright and colourful but if you want to read a more serious message in the photographs then you can do it as well. But my prime aim is to make accessible entertainment for ‘the masses’. So it’s a serious message disguised as (...)
Biographie/bibliographie de Martin Parr
publié le 18/09/2012
Né en Angleterre en 1952, Martin Parr est originaire d’Epsom, dans le Surrey. Son intérêt pour la photographie se manifeste dès l’enfance, sous l’aune de son grand-père George Parr, lui-même photographe amateur accompli. Martin Parr étudie la photographie à l’École polytechnique de Manchester, de 1970 à 1973. Pour subvenir à ses besoins tandis qu’il travaille comme photographe indépendant, il occupe divers postes d’enseignement entre 1975 et l’ouverture des années (...)
Dystopia in the plays of Samuel Beckett: Purgatory in Play
Eleanor Bryce - publié le 14/09/2012
The literary genre of dystopia remains popular in the English-speaking world, particularly in young adult fiction. In this age of rapid technological advances, and the threat (or indeed reality) of political and media control, works of literature which question the benefits of these developments are thriving.
Kate Colquhoun on the blurred boundaries between fiction and non-fiction
Kate Colquhoun - publié le 11/09/2012
Truman Capote called his 1966 book ((In Cold Blood)) the first non-fiction novel. Since then, the boundaries between fiction and non-fiction have become increasingly blurred. Are these false definitions? At least we could say that novelists are able to articulate the internal worlds – the thoughts and feelings – of their characters while non-fiction relies entirely on evidence.

Introduction au précis de phonétique et de phonologie
Manuel Jobert, Natalie Mandon - publié le 03/09/2012
La phonologie de l’anglais constitue l’un des trois « savoirs linguistiques » de la langue avec le lexique et la grammaire. Elle concerne trois des cinq compétences : la « compréhension de l’oral », « l’expression orale en continu » et « l’interaction orale ». Malgré les efforts fournis par les auteurs de manuels de langue, il semble que la connaissance des principes de base de la prononciation de l’anglais reste le plus souvent ignorée. La grammaire et la production (...)