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Sébastien Goubault Le Chien Dans Les Jeux Vidéo
Sébastien Goubault Le chien dans les jeux vidéo : archéologie, filiation et développement d’une réalité virtuelle ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOUBAULT Sébastien. Le chien dans les jeux vidéo : archéologie, filiation et développement d’une réalité virtuelle, sous la direction d’Éric Baratay. - Lyon : Université Jean Moulin (Lyon 3), 2018. Disponible sur : http://www.theses.fr/2018LYSE3001 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Document diffusé sous le contrat Creative Commons « Paternité – pas d’utilisation commerciale - pas de modification » : vous êtes libre de le rep roduire, de le distribuer et de le communiquer au public à condition d’en mentionner le nom de l’auteur et de ne pas le modifier, le transformer, l’adapter ni l’utiliser à des fin s commerciales. N°d’ordre NNT : 2018LYSE3001 THÈSE de DOCTORAT DE L’UNIVERSITÉ DE LYON Opérée au sein de l’Université Jean Moulin Lyon 3 École Doctorale de Sciences sociales ED 483 Discipline : Doctorat en Histoire mention histoire religieuse, politique et culturelle Soutenue publiquement le 17/01/2018, par : Sébastien Goubault Le chien dans les jeux vidéo Archéologie, filiation et développement d’une réalité virtuelle Devant le jury composé de : GUILLO, Dominique Directeur de recherche/CNRS Rapporteur SERVAIS Olivier Professeur/Université de Louvain Rapporteur DESPRET, Vinciane -
Narrative Inheritance: the Facts and Fictions That Shape Our Lives
NARRATIVE INHERITANCE: THE FACTS AND FICTIONS THAT SHAPE OUR LIVES A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of The School of Continuing Studies and of The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Liberal Studies By Caroline Jennifer Comport, B.A. Georgetown University Washington, D.C. April 2, 2012 Copyright 2012 by Caroline Jennifer Comport All Rights Reserved ii NARRATIVE INHERITANCE: THE FACTS AND FICTIONS THAT SHAPE OUR LIVES Caroline Jennifer Comport, B.A. Mentor: William J. O’Brien, Ph.D. ABSTRACT The purpose of this thesis is to explore the powerful impulse that drives people of all backgrounds to research their family of origin. In addition to understanding the motivating forces behind genealogical pursuits, this thesis will attempt to answer the following questions: How does who we think we are impact who we become? How is our life story shaped by the stories we believe about our family of origin? How do myth, reality, perception, and meaning influence the way we consciously and unconsciously frame and enact our life story? Does understanding our past give meaning to our present? This research endeavor employs a phenomenological approach to analyze data for meaning and themes. To mine and study this data, the author intentionally embarks on her own genealogical quest and describes the journey from a first-person point of view. The author uses the Comport family as a case study—drawing extensively on the life events of her paternal grandfather, Lionel Frederick Comport. The author chronicles the family’s transformation from 19th century English farmers to 20th century film pioneers. -
1973 Patsy Awards
A HI^L l^k /I A SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1973 WNhmDEVOTED TO PET CARE AND WELL-BEING NATIONAL DOG WEEK . - -*»«*> •% * 197 * - t i '£- y PATSY i AWARDS- fcS." I ! 8 • WITH HOWARD A, WEYKER DVM EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK THE AKC TODAY Guest Editorial by John Lafore, Jr. John Lafore, Jr., Philadelphia, is president of the American Kennel Club, regulating agency of the dog fancy in the United States. Following are excerpts from a speech he pre fflffifeiDE sented at a Dog Health Seminar spon sored by the Denver-based Morris Ani Official Journal of the Animal Health Foundation on animal care and health. mal Foundation February 4, 1973, in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER Volume 4 Number 5 We have recently made some changes in the American Kennel Club. A few have been executed, some are in ARTICLES the stages of execution, and others are still on the drawing board. Animals in Verse Cars ten Ahrens 6 One of the innovations, a new con Deserve To Be Your Dog's Best Friend 10 cept of enforcement and education in New AVMA President 11 the field, may solve some of the Bighorn Sheep in California Charles W. Jenner, D. V.M. 12 problems that worry dog breeders of An Emergency Hospital for Pets Jane H. Bailey 14 America. Canine Stamp Collection Olga Phillips 15 We have established a resident agent On African Safari with Howard A. Weyker, D.V.M. 16 in Iowa, the state which is the second Children's Page 20 largest breeder of commercial puppies Children's Picture Poem Mary B. -
NBC] 5 KCMO Kansas City [CBS] 6 KMOS Sedalia, MO [ABC, Now PBS] 9 KMBC Kansas City [ABC] 13 WIBW Topeka, KS [CBS, ABC]
Retro: Kansas City, Wed. April 22nd, 1959 Source: TV Guide CHANNELS 2 KFEQ St. Joseph, MO [ABC, CBS] 4 WDAF Kansas City [NBC] 5 KCMO Kansas City [CBS] 6 KMOS Sedalia, MO [ABC, now PBS] 9 KMBC Kansas City [ABC] 13 WIBW Topeka, KS [CBS, ABC] 6:30AM 4 Continental Classroom 6:55 5 Farm Facts 7AM 4 Today-Dave Garroway Guests are actor Hal Holbrook and Robert Dahl, author of "Breakdown." 5 News-Richard C. Hottelet 7:15 5 Captain Kangaroo 8AM 2 5 13 News 8:10 5 Take Five-Mark Stevens 8:15 2 13 Captain Kangaroo 5 Moment of Mediation 8:20 5 Cartoonland 8:30 5 Jimmy Dean 9 Romper Room 9AM 2 13 Morning Playhouse 4 Health, Safety, Science 5 [telecourse] 5 Life of Riley 9:30 2 5 13 Arthur Godfrey 4 Treasure Hunt 9 Daily Word 9:35 9 General Science 9 [telecourse]-Galey The digestion of food is discussed. 10AM 2 5 13 I Love Lucy 4 Price is Right 9 Whizzo's Wonderland 10:30 2 My Little Margie "Countless Margie." Margie and one of Vern's prospective clients go to a health sanitarium and then proceed to switch identities. Gale Storm. 4 Concentration 5 13 Top Dollar 11AM 2 5 13 Love of Life 4 Tic Tac Dough 9 Susie "Tangled Web." When Susie tells a "little white lie," many complications result. Ann Sothern, Don Porter. 11:30 2 Cartoon Capers 4 It Could Be You-Bill Leyden 5 Search for Tomorrow 9 Happy Home 1. How to make dress hangers and driftwood centerpieces. -
Human Cruelty, Animal Suffering, and American Culture, 1900-Present
Behaving Like Animals: Human Cruelty, Animal Suffering, and American Culture, 1900-present The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation McGrath, Timothy Stephen. 2013. Behaving Like Animals: Human Cruelty, Animal Suffering, and American Culture, 1900-present. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:10974708 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA © 2013 – Timothy Stephen McGrath All rights reserved. Professor Nancy Cott Timothy Stephen McGrath Behaving Like Animals: Human Cruelty, Animals Suffering, and American Culture, 1900-present Abstract What does it mean to be cruel to an animal? What does it mean for an animal to suffer? These are the questions embedded in the term “cruelty to animals,” which has seemed, at first glance, a well defined term in modern America, in so far as it has been codified in anti-cruelty statutes. Cruelty to animals has been a disputed notion, though. What some groups call cruel, others call business, science, culture, worship, and art. Contests over the humane treatment of animals have therefore been contests over history, ideology, culture, and knowledge in which a variety of social actors— animal scientists, cockfighters, filmmakers, FBI agents, members of Congress, members of PETA, and many, many others—try to decide which harms against animals and which forms of animal suffering are justifiable.