4 found
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Nathalie Rachlin [4]Nathalie Michele Rachlin [1]
  1.  23
    Alain Finkielkraut and the Politics of Cultural Identity.Nathalie Rachlin - 1995 - Substance 24 (1/2):73.
  2.  19
    Francis Ponge, Le Savon, and the Occupation.Nathalie Rachlin & Rosemarie Scullion - 1998 - Substance 27 (3):85.
  3.  38
    Introduction: From Engagé to Indigné: French Cinema and the Crises of Globalization.Nathalie Rachlin & Rosemarie Scullion - 2014 - Substance 43 (1):3-12.
    In 2010, two years after the global financial collapse that triggered the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s, the best-selling publication in France was not that year’s Prix Goncourt,1 Michel Houellebecq’s La carte et le territoire (The Map and the Territory), a novel published by Flammarion, one of Paris’s leading publishing houses. That honor went to Indignez-vous! (Time for Outrage!), a 32-page pamphlet authored by 93-year-old Stéphane Hessel, a former hero of the French Resistance, a concentration (...)
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  4.  43
    The Last Working Class City in France: Gheerbrant’s La république Marseille and Post-Global Cinema.Nathalie Rachlin - 2014 - Substance 43 (1):44-62.
    The title of this essay is not to be taken literally: I will not be making the case that Marseille is actually the last working class city in France. My title is a reference to Chris Marker’s 1993 film The Last Bolshevik (Le Tombeau d’Alexandre), a film about Alexander Medvedkin, one of the pioneers of early Soviet cinema. Medvedkin was the inspiration for the Groupe Medvedkine, a film collective founded by Chris Marker and made up of French militant filmmakers who, (...)
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