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L'équipe Des Scénaristes De Lost Comme Un Auteur Pluriel Ou Quelques Propositions Méthodologiques Pour Analyser L'auctorialité Des Séries Télévisées
Lost in serial television authorship : l’équipe des scénaristes de Lost comme un auteur pluriel ou quelques propositions méthodologiques pour analyser l’auctorialité des séries télévisées Quentin Fischer To cite this version: Quentin Fischer. Lost in serial television authorship : l’équipe des scénaristes de Lost comme un auteur pluriel ou quelques propositions méthodologiques pour analyser l’auctorialité des séries télévisées. Sciences de l’Homme et Société. 2017. dumas-02368575 HAL Id: dumas-02368575 https://dumas.ccsd.cnrs.fr/dumas-02368575 Submitted on 18 Nov 2019 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - NoDerivatives| 4.0 International License UNIVERSITÉ RENNES 2 Master Recherche ELECTRA – CELLAM Lost in serial television authorship : L'équipe des scénaristes de Lost comme un auteur pluriel ou quelques propositions méthodologiques pour analyser l'auctorialité des séries télévisées Mémoire de Recherche Discipline : Littératures comparées Présenté et soutenu par Quentin FISCHER en septembre 2017 Directeurs de recherche : Jean Cléder et Charline Pluvinet 1 « Créer une série, c'est d'abord imaginer son histoire, se réunir avec des auteurs, la coucher sur le papier. Puis accepter de lâcher prise, de la laisser vivre une deuxième vie. -
The University of Tennessee Knoxville an Interview with Ray H. Higgins for the Veteran's Oral History Project Center for the S
THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE KNOXVILLE AN INTERVIEW WITH RAY H. HIGGINS FOR THE VETERAN’S ORAL HISTORY PROJECT CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF WAR AND SOCIETY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY INTERVIEW BY G. KURT PIEHLER AND ELLEN EBERTS STRAWBERRY PLAINS, TENNESSEE APRIL 11, 2000 TRANSCRIPT BY ELLEN EBERTS REVIEWED BY CINNAMON BROWN MARK BOULTON KURT PIEHLER: This begins an interview with Ray H. Higgins on April 11, 2000 at Strawberry Plains, Tennessee with Kurt Piehler and ... ELLEN EBERTS: Ellen Eberts. PIEHLER: And, I guess, I’d first like to ask you a very basic question: where were you born and when were you born? RAY HIGGINS: I was born at Woodbury, Tennessee, June 18, nineteen and twenty-one. PIEHLER: And your ... parents were married in Woodbury, Tennessee? HIGGINS: Yes, yes they were married in Woodbury. She was from McMinnville, and he’s from Woodbury. PIEHLER: Do you know how your parents met? HIGGINS: Uh, they were neighbors. Uh, this is where I ad lib a little bit and tell you a little more than answering the question. PIEHLER: Please do. HIGGINS: Okay. My mother lost her husband to appendicitis. His name was Jesse Moore. And she had three children. And she lived near ... my father, uh, who was married and lost his wife with four children. Well all, putting them together automatically they had seven children, you see. (Laughter) Well, the grandparents on both sides ... felt sorry for them, I think, having that many children. So the maternal grandfather took ... our mother’s oldest daughter and, for all practical purposes, reared her as their own. -