Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ./DUMP-TEXT/3-35-utf8.txt
Encodage utilisé (INPUT) : UTF-8
Forme recherchée : nostalgie|nostalgia|Nostalgia|Nostalgie|怀旧
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Ligne n°1 : ... #InVisible Culture » Feed InVisible Culture » Comments Feed InVisible- Ligne n°2 : Culture » Mourning Becomes the Mad Men: Notes on Nostalgia Comments
Ligne n°3 : Feed Serializing the Past: Re-Evaluating History in Mad Men “So Much ...- Ligne n°42 : Mourning Becomes the Mad Men: Notes on Nostalgia
- Ligne n°48 : Modern nostalgia is a mourning for the impossibility of mythical
Ligne n°49 : return, for the loss of an enchanted world with clear borders and ...
Ligne n°50 : ... values; it could be a secular expression of a spiritual longing, a- Ligne n°51 : nostalgia for an absolute, a home that is both physical and spiritual,
Ligne n°52 : the edenic unity of time and space before entry into history. ~ ...
Ligne n°64 : ... simultaneously seductive and disconcerting about the show’s unabashed- Ligne n°65 : nostalgia for the 1960s and Draper’s inexplicably charming misogyny:
Ligne n°79 : ... (disappearing, lying, drinking and smoking). These latter traits evince- Ligne n°80 : a stark divergence in Mad Men’s particular brand of nostalgia; it
Ligne n°81 : acknowledges that sometimes we want to indulge in bad behavior (and in ...
Ligne n°119 : ... character anyone might admire or emulate would be an understatement.- Ligne n°120 : So, too, the show’s sense of nostalgia evinces a continual tension
Ligne n°121 : between longing and disavowal. The series represents its era, setting ...
Ligne n°123 : ... this essay, I explore two aspects of the show’s nostalgic appeal; in- Ligne n°124 : both cases, the pleasures of Mad Men’snostalgia are such that the show
Ligne n°125 : both indulges and repudiates its viewers’ desire(s). First of all, it ...
Ligne n°140 : ... is unable to fully assimilate into the rapidly changing present. Mad- Ligne n°141 : Men articulates not only viewers’ potential nostalgia (for being part
Ligne n°142 : of an era of hope and radical change), but also Don’s yearning for an ...
Ligne n°147 : ... Don’s explicit longing and whatever yearnings the show might attempt to- Ligne n°148 : cultivate in its viewers speak to the heart of nostalgia’s etymology:
Ligne n°149 : from medical condition and psychoanalytic trope to a sentiment ...
Ligne n°150 : ... exploited by advertisers and a lure of mass media. Originally- Ligne n°151 : considered a disease, nostalgia was first diagnosed by Johannes Hofer
Ligne n°152 : in 1688 as an extreme form of homesickness he noted in his observations ...
Ligne n°153 : ... of Swiss soldiers.^3 In its three-hundred-plus year evolution,- Ligne n°154 : nostalgia has shifted from medical conundrum to socially-accepted
Ligne n°155 : sentimentality. As Svetlana Boym elaborates, “Nostalgia (from ...
Ligne n°154 : ... nostalgia has shifted from medical conundrum to socially-accepted- Ligne n°155 : sentimentality. As Svetlana Boym elaborates, “Nostalgia (from
Ligne n°156 : nostos—return to home, and algia—longing) is a longing for a home that ...
Ligne n°156 : ... nostos—return to home, and algia—longing) is a longing for a home that- Ligne n°157 : no longer exists or has never existed. Nostalgia is a sentiment of loss
Ligne n°158 : and displacement, but it is also a romance with one’s own fantasy. […] ...
Ligne n°158 : ... and displacement, but it is also a romance with one’s own fantasy. […]- Ligne n°159 : A cinematic image of nostalgia is a double exposure, or a
Ligne n°160 : superimposition of two images—of home and abroad, past and present, ...
Ligne n°160 : ... superimposition of two images—of home and abroad, past and present,- Ligne n°161 : dream and everyday life.”^4 This description of nostalgia as a double
Ligne n°162 : exposure, past and present juxtaposed in a wild romantic dream, speaks ...
Ligne n°166 : ... fantasy of a past in which we never took part or only half-remember.- Ligne n°167 : This pleasure, often found in nostalgic daydreams, separates nostalgia
Ligne n°168 : from its cousin, mourning. Together, mourning and nostalgia often merge ...
Ligne n°167 : ... This pleasure, often found in nostalgic daydreams, separates nostalgia- Ligne n°168 : from its cousin, mourning. Together, mourning and nostalgia often merge
Ligne n°169 : in our thoughts of loves found and lost and cherished memories ...
Ligne n°172 : ... of a loved one, place or object (or, in some cases, even the loss of an- Ligne n°173 : idea: a fantasy never to be realized, a dream unmoored), nostalgia
Ligne n°174 : frames that sense of loss and imbues it with the richness of desire. ...- Ligne n°178 : Sometimes dwelling in nostalgia can be better than the actual lived
Ligne n°179 : moment. In the final episode of Mad Men’s first season (“The Wheel”), ...- Ligne n°213 : Nostalgia—it’s delicate, but potent. Teddy told me that in Greek,
Ligne n°214 : “nostalgia” literally means “the pain from an old wound.” It’s a twinge ...
Ligne n°213 : ... Nostalgia—it’s delicate, but potent. Teddy told me that in Greek,- Ligne n°214 : “nostalgia” literally means “the pain from an old wound.” It’s a twinge
Ligne n°215 : in your heart far more powerful than memory alone. This device isn’t a ...- Ligne n°222 : What does it mean that Don mistranslates nostalgia as a sort of
Ligne n°223 : remembered pain, a scar not quite healed in mind or body? The desire ...
Ligne n°223 : ... remembered pain, a scar not quite healed in mind or body? The desire- Ligne n°224 : implicit to contemporary (and commercial) uses of nostalgia are not
Ligne n°225 : reflected by the phrase “pain from an old wound,” nor does it quite ...
Ligne n°227 : ... carousel, a child’s journey round and round, a “place where we know we- Ligne n°228 : are loved.” Don’s supposed literal translation aligns nostalgia more
Ligne n°229 : closely with mourning than with fantasy or desire, as do his ...
Ligne n°245 : ... already gone, the first arrival only a fantasy of his return. In this- Ligne n°246 : scene, Don’s nostalgia, on such stark display during the Kodak pitch,
Ligne n°247 : works forward instead of backwards, projecting an impossible vision of ...
Ligne n°283 : ... nobody understands that. But you do. And that’s very valuable.” To Don,- Ligne n°284 : loss and nostalgia are powerful tools of the advertising trade, lending
Ligne n°285 : both him and Peggy a special aptitude to seek out and manipulate ...- Ligne n°314 : What of the viewer’s nostalgia, then? Does Mad Men’s success and the
Ligne n°315 : flurry of recent attempts to capitalize on 1960s retro chic (e.g. ...
Ligne n°320 : ... Men offers at least two paths towards this nostalgic imaginary.- Ligne n°321 : Embodied by Peggy, the first frames the viewer’s potential nostalgia as
Ligne n°322 : a pleasurable performance of historical fiction. This perspective ...
Ligne n°340 : ... pitiable outcast and a pathetic fool. His past isn’t pretty and neither- Ligne n°341 : is ours, but while nostalgia may lead Don astray, his loss is our gain.
Ligne n°342 : His mournful performance of lost identity echoes a sentiment many ...
Ligne n°361 : ... philaderers like Don. Understanding might require acceptance. Instead,- Ligne n°362 : Mad Men offers us nostalgia as a lure. The show basks in the past,
Ligne n°363 : reveling in both its triumphs and its failures. As viewers, not part of ...
Ligne n°368 : ... again.”- Ligne n°369 : 1. The Future of Nostalgia (New York: Basic Books, 2001), 8. ↩
Ligne n°370 : 2. From Season 34, episode 6 (aired October 25, 2008). Accessed on ...
Ligne n°373 : ... de. ↩- Ligne n°374 : 3. “Medical Dissertation on Nostalgia” (1688), translated by Carolyn
Ligne n°375 : K. Anspach, Bulletin of the History of Medicine2 (1934): 376-391. ↩ ...
Ligne n°375 : ... K. Anspach, Bulletin of the History of Medicine2 (1934): 376-391. ↩- Ligne n°376 : 4. The Future of Nostalgia, xiii-xiv. ↩
Ligne n°377 : 5. Mourning as a normal result of loss is discussed in more detail in ...
Ligne n°383 : ... reporting back to Don about all of their sessions. ↩- Ligne n°384 : 7. Boym, The Future of Nostalgia, 8. ↩
Ligne n°385 : 8. In Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Freud articulates this struggle ...- Ligne n°407 : One Response to "Mourning Becomes the Mad Men: Notes on Nostalgia"