Podcasts about victor hugo l

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Best podcasts about victor hugo l

Latest podcast episodes about victor hugo l

Entre nos pages
Episode #100 : Où l'on répond au tag de A à Z

Entre nos pages

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 70:53


Bonjouuuuur ! Eh oui, vous l'avez bien lu, nous sommes à l'épisode 100 :o (bon c'est pas non plus un scoop incroyable sachant que le dernier était le 99, mais quand même, 100 c'est un cap, et même un joli cap !). Pour l'occasion, un petit tag tranquille avec des questions variées sur nos lectures, et la lecture de manière générale.On espère que ça vous plaira, n'hésitez pas à nous donner vos avis, par mail : entrenospages@gmail.com ou via les réseaux sociaux que vous pouvez retrouver sur notre linktree ⁠https://linktr.ee/entrenospages⁠.Bonne écoute !Les livres abordés dans cet épisode sont :- Le goût du bonheur, Marie Laberge- La Passe-miroir, Christelle Dabos- Lightfall, Tim Probert- La maison aux esprits, Isabel Allende- Alice au pays des merveilles/Alice in wonderland, Lewis Carroll- Les raisins de la colère/The grapes of wrath, John Steinbeck- Les enfants indociles/Wayward children, Seanan McGuire- Diamants, Vincent Tassy- Le sang des princes, Romain Delplancq- Evidemment quelqu'un t'attend, Marie Vareille- Terremer/Earthsea, Ursula Le Guin- Les Misérables, Victor Hugo- L'assassin royal/The Farseer trilogy, Robin Hobb- Le chaos en marche/Chaos walking, Patrick Ness- Le petit prince, Antoine de St-Exupéry- Anastasia Krupnik, Lois Lowry- Comment le dire à la nuit, Vincent Tassy- L'espace d'un an/The long way to a small angry planet, Becky Chambers- Les ferrailleurs/Iremonger trilogy, Edward Carey- La vérité sur l'affaire Harry Québert, Joël Dicker- Arsène Lupin, Maurice Leblanc- Téméraire, Naomi Novik- Eragon, Christopher Paolini- Autant en emporte le vent/Gone with the wind, Margaret Mitchell- Genesis, Bernard Beckett- Quelques minutes après minuit/A monster calls, Patrick Ness- Le cirque des rêves/The night circus, Erin Morgenstern- Le Paris des merveilles, Pierre Pevel- 47 cordes, Timothé Le Boucher- Plus grand que le ciel, Virginie Grimaldi- Une valse pour les grotesques, Guillaume Chamanadjian- Le bossu de Notre-Dame : le livre du film, Stephen Rebello- Le cœur sur la table, Victoire Tuaillon- De grandes espérances/Great expectations, Charles Dickens- Fils-des-Brumes/Mistborn, Brandon Sanderson- Nos étoiles contraires/The fault in our stars, John Green Music promoted by La Musique LibreJoakim Karud - Canals: https://youtu.be/zrXbhncmorcJoakim Karud: https://soundcloud.com/joakimkarud

Au cœur de l'histoire
Victor Hugo, l'homme qui aime les femmes (partie 2)

Au cœur de l'histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2022 15:16


La vie de Victor Hugo est marquée par le succès de ses poèmes, romans et pièces de théâtre, mais aussi par ses nombreuses liaisons et histoires d'amour. Le plus grand écrivain français du XIXe siècle était aussi un grand séducteur. Dans ce nouvel épisode du podcast "Au cœur de l'Histoire", Clémentine Portier-Kaltenbach se penche sur l'histoire de celles qui ont joué un rôle central dans cette épopée littéraire, des femmes qui se sont détestées entre elles… avant de devenir des alliées de circonstance.

Au cœur de l'histoire
Victor Hugo, l'homme qui aime les femmes (partie 1)

Au cœur de l'histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2022 18:05


On connaît les grandes œuvres littéraires de Victor Hugo, sans doute le plus célèbre écrivain français du XIXe siècle. Mais sa vie sentimentale et familiale est tout aussi digne d'intérêt. En effet, le poète formait, avec son épouse Adèle Foucher et sa maîtresse Juliette Drouet, un ménage à trois original pour l'époque. Un trio qui va même devenir quatuor… Dans ce nouvel épisode du podcast "Au cœur de l'Histoire", Clémentine Portier-Kaltenbach s'intéresse aux (nombreuses) femmes qui ont marqué la vie de Victor Hugo. 

PORTRAITS par Lire Magazine Littéraire
Episode 2 - Victor Hugo, légende d'un siècle

PORTRAITS par Lire Magazine Littéraire

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2021 16:55


Cent cinquante ans après la parution des Misérables, Victor Hugo est toujours d'actualité. Écrivain illustre quoique controversé, Victor Hugo, par l'ampleur de son œuvre et de ses engagements politiques, a gardé une place d'honneur au panthéon des lettres françaises. Portrait. 

La cantine des âmes
#21: Felix Radu, petit prince de l'amour et de la littérature

La cantine des âmes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 56:15


Dans ce nouvel épisode de La cantine des âmes, j'ai le plaisir de cuisiner l'auteur et comédien Félix Radu. À 25 ans Félix est un véritable artiste, complet et caméléon. Comédien et écrivain, il a déjà écrit un spectacle seul en scène “les mots s'improsent” qu'il jouera au théâtre des Mathurins à la rentrée prochaine, mais est également l'auteur d'une mini-série "Félix Délire", réalisée en partenariat avec France Télévision dans le but de vulgariser les grands classiques de la littérature française auprès des jeunes bacheliers.  Mais ce qui m'a amené à inviter Félix dans cette cantine,c'est surtout sa manière bien à lui de donner du sens au monde qui l'entoure, ainsi qu'à son petit univers intérieur. Personnellement, c'est sur Internet que je l'ai eu le plaisir de le découvrir, à travers ses chroniques pour la radio Belge,  où il jouait avec les mots d'une manière délicate et sensible pour venir nous piquer là où il faut. L'amour, la vie, autant de terrains d'exploration dont Félix nous parle avec poésie et justesse. CITATIONS "Et en fait une fois que tu arrives là-bas dans une école d'art et que ta sensibilité n'est plus un poids mais au contraire te fait briller et que les gens en prennent soin, tu respires." " Quand t'es sur scène, t'es une meilleure version de toi même...je pallie ce que je n'ai pas dans la vie au théâtre." "j'aimerai toujours être jeune et donc arriver sur un terrain et me dire ok je ne sais rien, qu'est-ce que je fais pour apprendre et pour comprendre?". Ensemble, nous avons parlé de son enfance un peu douloureuse, de sa difficulté à trouver sa place, et de la manière dont le théâtre lui a permis de se libérer en faisait de sa sensibilité une force , de l'importance pour lui de nourrir l'inconfort dans la vie afin de s'y brûler et de la vivre pleinement.  Mais il nous a également partagé son amour pour la littérature d'Alfred de Musset, et surtout d'Albert Camus, de la théorie de l'homme révolté qui accepte l'absurdité du monde sans pour autant perdre espoir,  de son rapport à la solitude, mais aussi d'amour et de passion. Un menu croustillant que vous aimerez savourer autant que moi je l'espère. Pour retrouver les actualités de Félix Radu

J'ai un truc à vous lire
Lettre de Victor Hugo à Léon Richer

J'ai un truc à vous lire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2021 3:30


Journée Internationale des Droits des Femmes Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

Histoires de Musique
Victor Hugo, l’exil

Histoires de Musique

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2019 10:42


durée : 00:10:42 - Victor Hugo, l¿exil - par : Marianne Vourch - Le 11 décembre 1851 au soir, à la gare du Nord , un voyageur monte dans le train pour Bruxelles. Il s’en va, il fuit le coup d’état perpétré neuf jours plus tôt, par Louis Napoléon Bonaparte. Cet homme au « front monumental », aux « prunelles d’aigle », c’est Victor Hugo - réalisé par : Sophie Pichon

TV5MONDE - 300 millions de critiques
Victor Hugo / L'opéra pour tous / Exposition Electro

TV5MONDE - 300 millions de critiques

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2019 52:39


Au sommaire : L'instantané de la semaine Les chroniqueurs évoquent la photo marquante de la semaine et proposent cinq mots clefs sur le compte Instagram de l'émission. Victor Hugo, un coup de jeune inattendu Après l'incendie de Notre-Dame de Paris, nous avons redécouvert la modernité du roman éponyme de Victor Hugo. L'oeuvre s'est retrouvée pendant quelques jours en tête des ventes de livres. Au début du mois d'avril, on avait déjà beaucoup parlé de l'écrivain à l'occasion de la réouverture au public de sa maison sur l'île de Guernesey. Visite guidée. L'opéra démocratisé Alors que la 13e édition de l'opération Tous à l'opéra ! bat son plein dans toute la France avec 26 opéras ouvrant leurs portes gratuitement au public, l'opéra de Genève, récemment rénové, accueille des spectateurs enchantés par ce nouvel écrin. Mais fait-on assez pour dépoussiérer l'opéra partout en Francophonie ? Entretien Avec Jean-Yves Leloup, commissaire de l'exposition Electro, de Kraftwerk à Daft Punk, qui se tient à la Philharmonie de Paris jusqu'au 11 août 2019. « Tanguy, le retour », la suite se justifiait-elle ? Dix-sept ans après le succès phénoménal de « Tanguy », qui avait cumulé plus de 4 millions d'entrées, « « Tanguy, le retour » est dans les salles obscures. Alors que ce nouveau volet divise les critiques et les spectateurs, nous débattrons autour de la question suivante : quand faut-il arrêter d'exploiter un sujet ? Invité : Jean-Yves Leloup, commissaire de l'exposition Electro, de Kraftwerk à Daft Punk. Présentation : Guillaume Durand. Avec la participation de Michel Cerutti (RTS), Sylvestre Defontaine (RTBF), Matthieu Dugal (Radio-Canada), Laura Tenoudji (France Télévisions), Estelle Martin (TV5MONDE). Depuis la Philharmonie de Paris.

New Books in History
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books in French Studies
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in French Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books in European Studies
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in European Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books in Religion
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in Religion

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books in Christian Studies
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in Christian Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books in Biblical Studies
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in Biblical Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books Network
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France’s Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith’.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution cornell university press montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison
New Books in Catholic Studies
Carol E. Harrison, “Romantic Catholics: France's Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in Catholic Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2015 50:32


Since the political left and right first arose during the French Revolution, Catholics have been categorized as either conservatives or liberals, and most Catholics of the French nineteenth century are assumed to have been conservatives. In Romantic Catholics: France's Postrevolutionary Generation in Search of a Modern Faith (Cornell University Press, 2014), Carol E. Harrison goes beyond this familiar dichotomy to unveil a tradition of lay Catholicism that refused to go to either side, remaining in the political middle and marrying traditional Catholicism with a progressive social consciousness. Many of these people were the companions and heirs of the all-too-ill-known Félicité de Lamennais, whose condemnation by the pope in the 1830s did not prevent his social and religious vision from continuing to flourish throughout the century. I spoke with Harrison to hear her perspective on her Catholics, who range from the celebrated daughter of Victor Hugo Léopoldine, to a totally forgotten best-selling novelist, Pauline Craven, to the Empress Eugenia de Montijo herself. Nor were male Catholics missing from the story: we talked about the well-known historian Frédéric Ozanam, the melancholy poet Maurice de Guérin, and the Dominican star Henri Lacordaire. I heard all about their ‘romantic impulse toward a renewal of faith'.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

france french search romantic catholicism catholics gu dominican french revolution montijo cornell up ozanam modern faith lamennais victor hugo l postrevolutionary generation pauline craven empress eugenia carol e harrison