2008
DOI: 10.7202/018748ar
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L’éphémère dans l’éphémère

Abstract: RésuméLes études récentes portant sur les expositions universelles ont énormément privilégié leur caractère réifiant ou folklorisant dans le travail de cadastration des identités culturelles à l’intérieur de pavillons nationaux, ainsi que les représentations matérielles de ces expositions, qu’elles soient d’ordre architectural, ethnographique ou commercial. Cet article insistera donc sur un autre aspect des expositions universelles, celui des espaces non muséaux que sont les gr… Show more

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“…In France many municipalities and chambers of commerce began to organise their own exhibits, some of which (such as the Lyon Exhibition of 1894) were theoretically international in scope, although some of the most impressive exhibits held in the country were the colonial sections of the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1889 (Palermo, 2003;Tran, 2007;Wyss, 2010) and 1900 (Wilson, 1991;Mabire, 2000;Geppert, 2010: 62-100). Equally successful were the colonial sections of the Belgian exhibitions of the last quarter of the nineteenth century, which displayed the products and peoples of what was called the Congo Independent State (later the Belgian Congo), which until 1908 was a personal possession of King Leopold II.…”
Section: Colonial Exhibitions: Leisure Business and Indoctrinationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In France many municipalities and chambers of commerce began to organise their own exhibits, some of which (such as the Lyon Exhibition of 1894) were theoretically international in scope, although some of the most impressive exhibits held in the country were the colonial sections of the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1889 (Palermo, 2003;Tran, 2007;Wyss, 2010) and 1900 (Wilson, 1991;Mabire, 2000;Geppert, 2010: 62-100). Equally successful were the colonial sections of the Belgian exhibitions of the last quarter of the nineteenth century, which displayed the products and peoples of what was called the Congo Independent State (later the Belgian Congo), which until 1908 was a personal possession of King Leopold II.…”
Section: Colonial Exhibitions: Leisure Business and Indoctrinationmentioning
confidence: 99%