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Mises au jeu: les sports féminins à Montréal, 1919-1961
By Élise Detellier. 2015
" À Montréal au début du siècle dernier, des bourgeoises anglo-protestantes montaient à bicyclette, en dépit des diktats et des…
réticences de certains médecins craignant que cette activité puisse mener à l'orgasme. Les risques qu'encouraient les nouvelles sportives étaient multiples: attiser les passions de la chair, nuire à leur vertu, s'éloigner du foyer ou, pire, devenir masculines. Pour les Canadiennes françaises, l'accès au sport se fit plus tard, à la faveur de l'ouverture en 1919 de la Palestre nationale rue Cherrier. La toute-puissante Église catholique, avec ses idées bien arrêtées sur la vocation d'épouse et de mère, est-elle seule responsable de ce délai? Le nationalisme canadien-français qui imprégnait la Palestre nationale aurait-il freiné l'essor des sports féminins? Et parallèlement, la non-mixité au YWCA aura-t-elle permis aux anglophones d'exceller? Si le sport est le lieu par excellence où se définit l'identité masculine, la participation des femmes ne s'est pas faite sans heurts. Ce livre révèle l'histoire méconnue et foisonnante des sports féminins à Montréal durant la première moitié du 20e siècle. En plus d'analyser les discours des médecins, des professeur.e.s d'éducation physique, des clercs de l'Église catholique et des sportives, Mises au jeu fait revivre les pratiques d'une autre époque et nous fait découvrir des figures marquantes dont Myrtle Cook et Cécile Grenier. " -- 4e de couv.Louis Cyr, l'homme le plus fort du monde (Collection Biographie)
By Ben Weider. 1993
One child at a time: the global fight to rescue children from online predators
By Julian Sher. 2007
The Internet has helped make child abuse terrifyingly common. The men perpetrating these crimes include lawyers, priests, doctors and politicians,…
while the police - from a crack image analyst with the Toronto police to an FBI agent who poses as a thirteen-year-old girl online - work desperately to nab the predators. Investigators are using cutting edge tools, turning the technology of the Internet against the perpetrators, as they race to find and rescue the victims. Descriptions of sex and violence. 2007.One child
By Torey L Hayden. 2004
Six-year-old Sheila was abandoned by her mother on a highway when she was four. A survivor of horrific abuse, she…
never spoke, never cried, and was placed in a class for severely retarded children after committing an atrocious act of violence against another child. Everyone thought Sheila was beyond salvation - except her teacher, Torey Hayden. With patience, skill, and abiding love, she fought long and hard to release a haunted little girl from her secret nightmare - and nurture the spark of genius she recognised trapped within Sheila's silence. 2004.On tue les vieux (Enquête)
By Christophe Fernandez. 2006
Placée dans le seul contexte économique, la vieillesse n'est plus envisagée qu'en termes de contraintes, de charges et d'inutilité. La…
grande défausse des Etats permet un véritable génocide gériatrique sans culpabilité, parce que lorsqu'on est vieux on doit mourir. Un génocide silencieux perpétré grâce aux incohérences et aux maltraitances qui font tous les ans plus de morts que la canicule. De la prise en charge défaillante des vieux aux urgences à l'hécatombe des mauvaises orientations, sans parler des euthanasies, " tellement courantes, dit un médecin, que pour s'en convaincre il suffit d'aller dans les hôpitaux ", tout contribue à accélérer leur fin. Ceux qui survivent à l'hôpital se retrouvent dans des maisons de retraite inadaptées à leur prise en charge. Abandonnés sans soins dans des établissements sous-dotés en personnel, les vieux dénutris, sous-médicalisés et surmédicamentés ne font pas long feu. La justice ne condamne que rarement ces " dysfonctionnements institutionnels ". La vie d'un vieux, au pire, ça vaut deux ans avec sursis. L'Etat se désengage d'autant plus volontiers du problème qu'il veut privatiser le secteur. Reste à savoir à qui profite le crime...On the other side of shame: an extraordinary account of adoption and reunion
By Joanne Jowell. 2008
Lynette Langman's telephone rang on a Sunday night in 2001, heralding the call that would unravel her life. For forty…
long years, she had waited to hear news about the son she gave up for adoption when she was virtually a child herself. His birth had remained a closely guarded secret, hidden even from those who knew her best. And now her disclosure would unleash years of bottled questions and confessions. 2008.Of ice and men: Steve Yzerman, Chris Chelios, Glen Sather, Dominik Hasek : the craft of hockey
By Bruce Dowbiggin. 1998
Dowbiggin studies Yzerman, Chelios, Sather and Hasek as examples of the thinking side of hockey. He examines Yzerman's leadership ability,…
Chelios' determination, Hasek's unorthodox style and Sather's ability to build a successful team by emphasizing team chemistry over individual talent. Dowbiggin argues that it is participants such as these men who over the years have transformed hockey from a game into a craft. c1998.On your mark, get set: all about the Olympics then & now
By Paulette Bourgeois. 1987
Old age: Journey Into Simplicity
By Helen M Luke. 1987
The author's philosophical journey through attitudes on aging draws inspiration from the classics. Creatively employing the language and ideas of…
Homer, Shakespeare, Dante, Eliot and others, she considers how to grow old with grace, intelligence and humour. 1987.On snooker: the game and the characters who play it
By Mordecai Richler. 2001
A personalized introduction to snooker and its best players. In the early 1950s, the author relocated to London, where he…
followed the popular British snooker competitions. Among the profiles of the sport's heroes and villains, Richler includes digressions on a wide variety of topics, including anti-Semitism in sports, and the greed of today's athletes. Some strong language. 2001.Offside: the battle for control of Maple Leaf Gardens
By Theresa Tedesco. 1996
Business journalist Tedesco describes the battle waged for control of Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd. after the death of Harold Ballard.…
The figures include some of Canada's best known business people and largest corporations. 1996.Moi, Christiane F., 13 ans, droguée, prostituée
By Léa Marcou, Kai Hermann, Horst Rieck. 1981
Ce livre raconte l'histoire de Christiane, une jeune fille sensible et intelligente, qui, moins de deux ans après avoir fumé…
son premier "joint", se prostitue à la sortie de l'école afin de trouver l'argent nécessaire à l'achat de sa dose quotidienne d'héroïne. Quelques descriptions de violence. 1981.L'intolérance: une problématique générale
By Lise Noël. 1989
L'intolérance et l'oppression peuvent prendre des visages multiples. On n'avait pas encore tente jusqu'ici de dresser un tableau d'ensemble qui…
montre comment s'articulent les rapports dominants/dominés autour des paramètres que sont l'âge, le sexe, la condition physique et mentale, l'appartenance ethnique, la langue ou l'orientation sexuelle. C'est ce que l'on trouve dans ce livre. 1989.La gaffe
By Françoise Gramet, Tom MacDonnell. 1988
Toronto, le 20 aout 1984, une jeune fille de 14 ans est portee disparue. Trois jours plus tard, sa mere…
se rend au poste de police et apprend que sa fille se prostitue. Mme McFarlane se battra alors pendant deux ans et demi pour separer Kristy de la rue. Le 11 fevrier 1987, celle-ci etait retrouvee morte dans la cage d'escalier d'un hotel du centre-ville. Pour les lecteurs d'école secondaire. 1988. Titre uniforme: Never let go.Notes from a feminist killjoy: essays on everyday life (Essais ; #no. 2)
By Erin Wunker. 2016
Erin Wunker is a feminist killjoy, and she thinks you should be one, too. Following in the tradition of Sara…
Ahmed (the originator of the concept "feminist killjoy"), Wunker brings memoir, theory, literary criticism, pop culture, and feminist thinking together in this collection of essays that take up Ahmed's project as a multi-faceted lens through which to read the world from a feminist point of view. She attempts to think publicly about why we need feminism, and especially why we need the figure of the feminist killjoy, now. From the complicated practices of being a mother and a feminist, to building friendship amongst women as a community-building and -sustaining project, to writing that addresses rape culture from the Canadian context and beyond, Wunker invites the reader into a conversation about gender, feminism, and living in our inequitable world. Winner of the 2017 Evelyn Richardson Non-Fiction Award. 2016.Nobody: casualties of America's war on the vulnerable, from Ferguson to Flint and beyond
By Marc Lamont Hill. 2017
Protests in Ferguson, Missouri, and across the United States following the death of Michael Brown revealed something far deeper than…
a passionate display of age-old racial frustrations; they unveiled a public chasm that has been growing for years, as America has consistently and intentionally denied significant segments of its population access to full freedom and prosperity. Hill presents an analysis of race and class by examining a growing crisis in America: the existence of a group of citizens who are made vulnerable, exploitable, and disposable through the machinery of unregulated capitalism, public policy, and social practice. To make his case, Hill carefully reconsiders the details of tragic events like the deaths of Michael Brown, Sandra Bland, and Freddie Gray, and the water crisis in Flint, Michigan. He delves deeply into a host of alarming trends including mass incarceration, overly aggressive policing, broken court systems, shrinking job markets, and the privatization of public resources, showing the ways the current system is designed to worsen the plight of the vulnerable. 2017.No way to live: poor women speak out
By Sheila Baxter. 1988
No fat chicks: how women are brainwashed to hate their bodies and spend their money
By Terry Poulton. 1996
Journalist Poulton traces the history of perceptions of weight and beauty, arguing that the media-driven ideal body has poisoned the…
lives of women who do not meet that ideal, and even many who do. The result is discrimination in everything from employment to education. 1996.Ninety percent mental: an all-star player turned mental skills coach reveals the hidden game of baseball
By Scott Miller, Bob Tewksbury. 2018
Bob Tewksbury shows listeners a side of baseball only he can provide, given his singular background as both a longtime…
MLB pitcher and a mental skills coach for two of the sport's most fabled franchises, the Boston Red Sox and San Francisco Giants. 2018.Nine lessons I learned from my father
By Murray Howe. 2017
Unlike his two brothers, Murray Howe failed in his attempt to follow in his father's footsteps to become a professional…
athlete. Yet, his failure brought him to the realization that in truth, his dream wasn't to be a pro hockey player. His dream was to be his father, Gordie Howe. To be amazing at something, but humble and gracious. To be courageous, and stand up for the little guy. To be a hero. You don't need to be a hockey player to do that. What he learned was that it is a waste of time wishing you were like someone else. We need to identify and embrace our gifts. Gordie Howe may have been the greatest player in the history of hockey, but greatness was never defined by goals or assists in the Howe household. Greatness meant being the best person you could be, not the best player on the ice. Bestseller. 2017.