Effusive history of the Grande Découverte Volcanic Complex, southern Basse-Terre (Guadeloupe, French West Indies) from new K–Ar Cassignol–Gillot ages

2009 ◽  
Vol 187 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 117-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Samper ◽  
X. Quidelleur ◽  
J.-C. Komorowski ◽  
P. Lahitte ◽  
G. Boudon
1995 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Chivallon

Unlike research in the Anglophone West Indies, research in the French West Indies has only very recently developed the idea of the existence of a peasant social group in the plantation societies of Guadeloupe and Martinique. The fragility and instability of the collective identity in the French West Indies has served as a principal argument to support the view that the group is not a peasantry but a mere by-product of the plantation system. The idea of the absence of a real process of taking control of space or of a sort of intimate history with space occurs in some writings to explain this weakness of collective sense. Far from refuting the argument which firmly links the identity question to that of space, I shall reinforce it but in order to show that, on the contrary, there arc good grounds for affirming the existence, in the case of the peasant group in Martinique, of an original social experience in which space is strongly mobilised. In doing this, my intention is also to add weight to a theoretical point of view which shows the strength of the ties between space and identity, given that the peasant world in Martinique provides a paradigmatic example of the undeniable power of these ties.


Author(s):  
Fabienne Viala

This essay examines the nature, scope and consequences of the seism of memory since its eruption in 2000 in Guadeloupe, French West Indies. In particular, it questions how the context of a multifaceted appetite for collective remembrance took the form of competing strategies for memorialization in the space. As such, it focuses on the heritage of pain, resistance and pride at the local, national and regional levels. I draw on Shalini Puri’s analysis of the repressed memory of the 1983 Grenada revolution in Operation Urgent Memory to identify in the landscape of Guadeloupe submerged, residual and eruptive ‘platforms of memory’ (Puri, 2012). In the specific case of Guadeloupe, the collective efforts of the Guadeloupean people for re-appropriating their non-French and non-European heritage on the island have turned into competitive post-traumatic approaches of the history of transatlantic slave trade. This essay eventually analyses the case of the Mémorial ACTe (MACTe) – Museum of Contemporary Caribbean Art and Memorial for the History of the Slave Trade – as constituting the most successful expression of what I define as cultural marronage, in the ambivalent postcolonial environment of the French Overseas Regions.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1482-1482
Author(s):  
Jean Pegliasco ◽  
Barbara Panneau-Schmaltz ◽  
Jean-Edouard Martin ◽  
Samy Chraibi ◽  
Clemence Legoupil ◽  
...  

Abstract In 2015, a germline copy number variation of chromosome 14 (CNVdup14) including ATG2B and GSKIP genes was described as a predisposition genetic factor responsible of familial myeloproliferative neoplasms from French West Indies (Saliba et al, Nat Gen 2015), frequently progressing to AML. In this study, we looked at the presence of this CNVdup14 in a cohort of Caribbean islands patients (pts) with non-secondary aggressive hematological malignancies (HM). We also studied the expression of ATG2B and GSKIP genes in a cohort of acquired AML pts. This is a retrospective multicenter study of adults Caribbean islands pts treated at Gustave Roussy Cancer Center (Villejuif, France) and at the French West Indian hospitals (Martinique and Guadeloupe) between May 2000 and May 2018. We included pts with AML, acute undifferentiated leukemia (AUL), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and lymphoblastic lymphoma (LL). Pts with personal history of myeloproliferative or myelodysplastic syndromes before the onset of aggressive HM were not included in this study. The presence of the CNVdup14 was carried out by PCR analyses in all the pts. For the second part of the study, expression of ATG2B and GSKIP genes were assessed in newly diagnosed de novo AML pts with normal karyotype or trisomy 8 (samples from the GOELAMSTHEQUE) by quantitative RT-PCR and expressed as relative expression PPIA/HPRT/H2A.Z. One hundred pts were analyzed. Median age was 52 years (IQ 40-62) with male predominance (61%). Fifty eight pts came from Martinique, 42 pts from the rest of the Caribbean islands (including 28, 4, 3, 2 pts from Guadeloupe, Haiti, Saint Martin, Dominican Republic, respectively). Seventy eight pts had AML. Among them, according to revised MRC cytogenetic classification, 11 (14%) were favorable, 47 (60%) intermediate and 20 (26%) adverse. Seventeen pts had ALL, 3 LL, and 2 AUL. On the entire cohort, all except nine pts were treated with intensive chemotherapy, 80 reached complete remission, 29 relapsed, 46 pts died. Thirty two pts received hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Six pts were positive for the CNVdup14 by PCR (confirmed by SNP array in the 5 pts with leftover DNA available). All had an AML (no pts with favorable AML) and were originated from Martinique. These pts represented 14% of the 43 AML from Martinique in our cohort (17% if we excluded favorable AML). One was known to be part of an ATG2B/GSKIP family, 2 pts had no familial history of myeloid malignancies and 2 new families were discovered. Median white blood cell, hemoglobin and platelets counts were 17.7 G/l (IQ 6.7-48), 8.15 g/dl (6.9-9.7) and 58 G/l (20-132), respectively. Median age at AML diagnosis was 49 years (34-55), 3/6 (50%) had extramedullary localization compared to 11/78 (14%) for others AML pts. Karyotype was normal for 4, or showed a monosomy 7 for 2 pts. NGS panel showed distinct abnormalities compared to the entire cohort (Fig A). None had JAK2, MPL, CALR, P53, RUNX1, DNMT3A, FLT3-ITD mutations. All harbored an epigenetic and/or spliceosome mutation (IDH n=3, TET2 n=3, ASLX1 n=3, SRSF2 n=3). Five out of the six pts received intensive treatment and 4 achieved complete remission. Two received HSCT, 2 relapsed and 4 died. Median overall survival (OS) of the entire cohort was 35.7 months (22.5-89.5) and progression free survival (PFS) 27.6 months (15.6 -56.1). As CNVdup14 pts had AML only, we next evaluated survival according to the predisposition status in the AML cohort. Pts with CNVdup14 had a median OS and PFS of 19 (6.5-29) and 11.4 (6.5-29) months, respectively, compared with 52.6 (22.9-100.2) and 30 months (15.6-60) in CNV wild-type counterparts (PFS Fig B). We next evaluated ATG2B and GSKIP expression in a cohort of 46 random de novo AML pts (GOELAMS-LAM-IR-2006 multicenter trial). Median expression of ATG2B and GSKIP were 4.8 (2.6-12.9) and 5.3 (0.3-5.1) respectively. No CNVdup14 was detected. Interestingly we found a correlation between the two genes expression (Pearson Correlation Coefficients 0.55 and linear regression p< 0.001, Fig C). Expression of ATG2B and GSKIP was also correlated with leukocytosis (p=0.003 and p=0.07) (Fig D). We found no impact on OS and PFS. For the first time, we described a high percentage of the germline CNVdup14 in de novo AML pts from Martinique (14%). Moreover evaluation of ATG2B and GSKIP expression suggested that the role of theses 2 genes in leukemogenesis is not limited to pts with the CNVdup14. Figure. Figure. Disclosures de Botton: Agios: Research Funding; Celgene: Honoraria, Research Funding. Benabelali:CERBA laboratory: Employment.


Costume ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 217-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane Ashelford

When Jane Austen wrote in January 1801 that ‘Mrs Powlett was at once expensively and nakedly dressed’, the fashion for muslin dresses had existed for some eighteen years. This article examines the crucial period between 1779 and 1784 when the muslin garment, which became known as the chemise à la reine, was developed and refined. Originating in the French West Indies, the gaulle was the ‘colonial livery’ worn by the wives of the white elite, the ‘grands blancs’, and first appeared as a costume in a ballet performed in Paris in 1779. The version worn by Queen Marie Antoinette in Vigée Le Brun's controversial portrait of 1783 provoked, according to the Baron de Frénilly, ‘a revolution in dress’ which eventually destabilized society. The article focuses on the role played by Saint-Domingue, France's most valuable overseas possession, in the transference of the gaulle from colonial to metropolitan fashion, and how the colony became one of the major providers of unprocessed cotton to the French cotton industry.


The Lancet ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 354 (9188) ◽  
pp. 1472-1473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irene Litvan

Geoderma ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 282 ◽  
pp. 129-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Lloret ◽  
Céline Dessert ◽  
Heather L. Buss ◽  
Carine Chaduteau ◽  
Sylvain Huon ◽  
...  

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