2004
DOI: 10.3917/ethn.041.0031
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Cultiver ses racines

Abstract: Résumé « Être de quelque part » ? Appuyée sur une enquête en Minervois, la réponse proposée met en lumière les fondements généalogiques du sentiment d’autochtonie : les « racines » ne poussent bien que là où ont vécu les propres parents de l’individu, là où s’ancre la mémoire familiale. Manipulé avec brio par les élites héritières de l’Ancien Régime et les passionnés de généalogie, le discours généalogique conforte a priori ce constat. Cependant, ce discours semble inapte à rendre compte de l’« enracinement » … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Railait ė-Bard ė ( 2018), whose research is also centred on nobility and its genealogical consciousness, investigates the significance of glorifying various battles and the pride derived from the involvement of ancestors in shaping the genealogical memory of the nobility. Sagnes (2004) equates the notions of genealogical and familial memory without explicitly defining them. Instead, she associates both with the genealogist's endeavour to reconstruct family history beyond three generations and communicative memory.…”
Section: Genealogical Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Railait ė-Bard ė ( 2018), whose research is also centred on nobility and its genealogical consciousness, investigates the significance of glorifying various battles and the pride derived from the involvement of ancestors in shaping the genealogical memory of the nobility. Sagnes (2004) equates the notions of genealogical and familial memory without explicitly defining them. Instead, she associates both with the genealogist's endeavour to reconstruct family history beyond three generations and communicative memory.…”
Section: Genealogical Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%