Entre Nous : David Nicholls au micro de Jean Dominique ; Amos Coulanges et Jho Archer à Paris
-
Download
- Rights
- Files (1)
-
MP3
- Please be patient with media downloads. They are often large files.
-
Share
Embed CodePermalink
- Skip to Item Info
Item Info
- Title:
- Entre Nous : David Nicholls au micro de Jean Dominique ; Amos Coulanges et Jho Archer à Paris
- Alternative Title:
-
- Entre Nous: David Nicholls devan mikwo Jean Dominique; Amos Coulanges avèk Jho Archer nan Pari
- Entre Nous: David Nicholls interviewed by Jean Dominique; Amos Coulanges and Jho Archer in Paris
- Program Name:
- Entre Nous
- Speaker:
- Date:
- June 26, 1996
- Description:
-
Radyo Ayiti fouye anndan pwòp achiv pa l pou redifize yon entèvyou Jean Dominique te mennen avèk istoryen anglè David Nicholls, ki mouri nan lane 1996. Nicholls pale sou mouvman ideyolojik ak politik aprè okipasyon ameriken Ayiti a (1915-1934). Li idantifye twa tèm ideyolojik - nasyonalis, nwaris, ak sosyalis - ki te enfliyanse politik Ayiti yo aprè okipasyon an. Nicholls pale sou monte ideyoloji fachis toupatou nan mond lan, ak monte ideyoloji nwaris ak kominis an Ayiti. Nan dezyèm pati emisyon an, Guyler C. Delva entèvyouve de atis trè koni an Ayiti k ap viv Pari aktyèlman: gitaris Amos Coulanges avèk chantè-dansè Jho Archer.
Rediffusion d’une interview de Jean Dominique avec l’historien anglais David Nicholls, qui est mort en 1996. Nicholls parle des mouvements idéologiques et politiques qui ont suivi l’occupation américaine d’Haïti (1915-1934). Il identifie trois thèmes, le nationalisme, le noirisme et le socialisme, qui ont influencé la politique haïtienne, après l’occupation. Nicholls parle de la montée du fascisme partout dans le monde et la montée du noirisme et du communisme en Haïti. En deuxième partie d’émission, Guyler C. Delva rencontre deux artistes haïtiens vivant à Paris : le guitariste Amos Coulanges et le chanteur-danseur Jho Archer.
Radio Haiti revisits its archives to broadcast Jean Dominique's 1976 interview with British historian David Nicholls, who died in 1996. Nicholls discusses ideological and political movements in the aftermath of the American occupation of Haiti (1915-1934). He identifies three ideological threads--nationalism, noirism, and socialism-- affecting politics in post-occupation Haiti. Nicholls discusses the rise of fascism around the world, and the rise of noirism and communism in Haiti. In the second part of the broadcast, Guyler C. Delva interviews two renowned Haitian musicians living in Paris: guitarist Amos Coulanges and singer-dancer Jho Archer.
- Program Type:
- Interview
- Subject:
-
- Anti-Superstition Campaign
- Kanpay kont sipèstisyon
- Campagne antisuperstitieuse
- Fascism
- Fachis
- Fascisme
- Haiti--History--American occupation, 1915-1934
- Okipasyon ameriken 1915-1934
- Occupation d'Haïti par les États-Unis 1915-1934
- Nationalism
- Nasyonalis
- Nationalisme
- Noirism
- Nwaris
- Noirisme
- Haiti--Foreign relations--United States
- Relasyon ant Ayiti ak Etazini
- Relations haïtiano-américaines
- Race
- Ras
- Communism
- Kominis
- Communisme
- United States. Marine Corps
- Marin ameriken
- Corps des Marines des États-Unis
- Music--Haiti
- Mizik ayisyen
- Musique haïtienne
- Alexis, Jacques Stéphen, 1922-1961
- Depestre, René
- Roumain, Jacques, 1907-1944
- La Ruche (magazine)
- Coulanges, Amos
- Archer, Jho
- Location:
- Language:
- Tape ID:
- RL10059CS1285
- Rights:
- Limited Re-UseCC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- Rights Note:
- This recording may contain material that was not originally created by Radio Haiti and therefore not covered by the Creative Commons license indicated here. For more information see https://repository.duke.edu/dc/radiohaiti/about#copyright.
- Digital Collection:
- Radio Haiti Archive
- Source Collection:
- Radio Haiti audio recordings, 1957-2003
- Identifier:
-
- b2b00bba2e083508d65e01bbe434d121
- radiohaiti
- duke:623176
- RL10059-CS-1285_01
- ark:/87924/r4nz84p65
- b466e62f-80e1-40f5-bd6e-58ad58a6442a
- Permalink:
- https://idn.duke.edu/ark:/87924/r4nz84p65
- Sponsor:
- Sponsor this Digital Collection
The preservation of the Duke University Libraries Digital Collections and the Duke Digital Repository programs are supported in part by the Lowell and Eileen Aptman Digital Preservation Fund