Nouvelles études africaines, actes des 2e et 3e journées d’études du Groupe de contact FNRS "Belgique et mondes contemporains" (7/5/2011 et 4/2/2012)Lanneau, Catherine ; ; Book published by P.I.E.-Peter Lang (in press) Detailed reference viewed: 18 (5 ULg) Image de l'autre, lieux communs et stéréotypes: Français et Belges francophones au milieu du XXe siècleLanneau, Catherine ![]() E-print/Working paper (2013) Detailed reference viewed: 38 (7 ULg) A la recherche d’une oreille gaulliste… Espoir et illusions des militants wallons au cœur des années 60Lanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2013, April 20) Detailed reference viewed: 10 (0 ULg) Une France nouvelle ? Les sociétés de conférences belges face à la France au lendemain de la Seconde Guerre mondialeLanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference given outside the academic context (2013) Detailed reference viewed: 11 (0 ULg) Les relations internationales à la lumière de quelques grands discours politiques du XXe siècleLanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference given outside the academic context (2013) Detailed reference viewed: 3 (2 ULg) "Europe-Amérique" - "Europe-Magazine": un hebdomadaire belge, organe de l'extrême-droite française (1945-1960)?Lanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2012, October 24) Issued under various titles between 1944 and the early 1980’s, the Belgian weekly Europe Amérique / Magazine showed itself at first rather eclectic in the choice of its writers and the articles it ... [more ▼] Issued under various titles between 1944 and the early 1980’s, the Belgian weekly Europe Amérique / Magazine showed itself at first rather eclectic in the choice of its writers and the articles it published. It had soon more and more pronounced leanings towards the far right and specialized itself in a vociferous form of anticommunism, the rehabilitation of Vichy regime and strong criticism of the Republic as the brain child of a biased vision of the Resistance. It opened its columns to avowed rightist French journalists ear-marked for theit conduct during WW2 and / or having their names on the black list of the Comité National des Ecrivains. After describing the inner story of the weekly, the causes and consequences of its two prohibitions in France (1946-1948, 1949-1953), this article deals with its strongly Vichy tainted staff of French writers (Alfred Fabre-Luce, Louis Guitard, Louis Rougier, Pierre Dominique, Albert Paraz, Lucien Rebatet...) and its closeness with the well-known Paroles Françaises, Ecrits de Paris and Rivarol. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 24 (2 ULg) Liège entre la France et l'Allemagne : influences et échanges culturelsBrüll, Christoph ; Lanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2012, October 13) Detailed reference viewed: 11 (4 ULg) Il y a cent ans, la « Lettre au Roi » de Jules DestréeLanneau, Catherine ![]() Article for general public (2012) Detailed reference viewed: 19 (4 ULg) Le congrès wallon de juillet 1912 : impact, significations et retombéesLanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2012, April 24) Pris en tenaille entre les élections du 2 juin et la publication de la Lettre au Roi, le congrès wallon de Liège du 7 juillet 1912 reste peu connu. En termes de souvenir collectif et d’inévitable ... [more ▼] Pris en tenaille entre les élections du 2 juin et la publication de la Lettre au Roi, le congrès wallon de Liège du 7 juillet 1912 reste peu connu. En termes de souvenir collectif et d’inévitable hiérarchisation des événements historiques, ce sont bien deux autres congrès wallons, tenus à Liège également, qui surnagent : le congrès « identitaire » de 1905 et le fameux congrès national d’octobre 1945. Pourtant, le congrès de 1912 a eu au moins deux implications fondamentales : entretenir, au cœur de l’été le débat sur la séparation administrative, qui rebondira après la lettre de Destrée, et acter la désignation d’un comité d’action wallonne dont les premiers noms sont proposés en séance. C’est l’origine de l’Assemblée wallonne. Notre contribution proposera d’abord un bref résumé des débats ayant animé le congrès, en montrant les nuances entre le compte rendu officiel et celui des observateurs présents. Elle s’emploiera ensuite à analyser la réception du congrès dans l’opinion en insistant sur l’idée de séparation administrative. Qui se dit séparatiste ? Que recouvre cette expression, entre provincialisme et régionalisme ? Quels sont les arguments des partisans et des adversaires de la séparation ? Comment le contexte national et international de 1912 rejaillit-il sur ce débat ? [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 19 (6 ULg) Raymond De Becker : une certaine idée de la Belgique. Réflexions sur une identité nationale et culturelleLanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2012, April 05) Detailed reference viewed: 10 (2 ULg) Un journal face à ses lecteurs étrangers : le cas des lecteurs belges du ‘Monde’ à travers les archives Beuve-MéryLanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2012, March 24) Detailed reference viewed: 10 (2 ULg) Histoire de la Hesbaye liégeoise. Epoque contemporaineLanneau, Catherine ; in Lange, Claude (Ed.) Histoire de la Hesbaye liégeoise (2012) Detailed reference viewed: 43 (1 ULg) Du gaullisme à la droite radicale. Les étranges « compagnons de route » belges de l’Europe gaullienneLanneau, Catherine ![]() in Dard, Olivier (Ed.) Doctrinaires, vulgarisateurs et passeurs des droites radicales au XXe siècle (Europe-Amérique) (2012) To give priority to national sovereignty, as proposed by the De Gaulle’s “Europe of Nations”, found but little success in a Belgium seeing herself as the spearhead of a Federalized Europe. Some rather ... [more ▼] To give priority to national sovereignty, as proposed by the De Gaulle’s “Europe of Nations”, found but little success in a Belgium seeing herself as the spearhead of a Federalized Europe. Some rather marginal groups, standing mainly on the right side, were however reluctant towards decision-making transfers to supranational organisms. They recruited among well-known conservative people, either members of the Catholic or Liberal party, as demonstrated by the group which was to be – briefly- the Belgian branch of the Pan-European Union (UP) led by Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi. The French branch of the UP was clearly run by members of the Gaullist UNR. In Belgium, the Count could find some audience among people already at odds with the more powerful Mouvement Européen or feeling themselves uneasy in its ranks. Among them, the well-known Catholic Senator and former staunch nationalist Pierre Nothomb and his disciple Florimond Damman, an avowed nationalist, rabid anticommunist and nostalgic of the colonial empires. Damman was running a intricate host of associations situated between political think thanks and high society meeting clubs. Around them, inside the AENA (Association pour l’Europe Nouvelle et l’Expansion Atlantique) – a title having obviously very little to do with Gaullist attitude – one could find the Liberal Paul Rohr, founder of the Cercle de Politique Etrangère, and Jack de Spirlet, leader of the Belgian branch of CEDI (Centre Européen de Documentation et d’Information) which had as main goal the integration of Franco’s Spain inside the West European fold. All of them were dedicated supporters of Archduke Otto of Habsburg, an ideal ruler for their Europe-to-be. Were they nothing but forlorn dreamers using the Gaullist policies as a promoting step? The General’s hostile attitude towards NATO and the “empty chair crisis” provoked at last a break with Coudenhove-Kalergi. After the death in late 1966 of Baron Nothomb, their sound bottom, other brain-children of Damman (AESP, MAUE) replaced AENA and ended up in total service of the ideals of Archduke Otto and CEDI. At the same time, and for a decade, they maintained ties with various ultra-Catholic circles and activist anticommunist lobbies such as the WACL and ABN, but also with militant far right networks such as Aginter-Presse run by Guérin-Sérac, and in Belgium and France the groups around Révolution Européenne et Europe-Action. The “sniffer-planes” scandal brought an end to these many-fold activities, and to Damman’s life... [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 37 (3 ULg) Où va l’eau wallonne ? Débats et polémiques à Liège autour du traité Escaut-Rhin (1963-1965)Lanneau, Catherine ![]() in Raxhon, Philippe (Ed.) Liège à la conquête de l'eau. Des origines au centenaire de la CILE (2012) Detailed reference viewed: 20 (4 ULg) La Wallonie et la FranceLanneau, Catherine ![]() in Demoulin, Bruno (Ed.) Histoire culturelle de la Wallonie (2012) Detailed reference viewed: 13 (3 ULg) Wallonië en FrankrijkLanneau, Catherine ![]() in Demoulin, Bruno (Ed.) Een culturele geschiedenis van Wallonië (2012) Detailed reference viewed: 8 (0 ULg) Wallonia and FranceLanneau, Catherine ![]() in Demoulin, Bruno (Ed.) A cultural history of Wallonia (2012) Detailed reference viewed: 10 (1 ULg) D’étranges « compagnons de route » belges pour la politique européenne de la France gaullienneLanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2011, November 17) Detailed reference viewed: 14 (1 ULg) La propagande culturelle française à destination de la Flandre, 1944-1960Lanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2011, October 07) Detailed reference viewed: 26 (10 ULg) La frontière: concepts et historiographie (Introduction)Close, Florence ; Lanneau, Catherine ![]() Conference (2011, April 29) Detailed reference viewed: 40 (5 ULg) |
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