%0 Book Section %9 OS CH : Chapitres d'ouvrages scientifiques %A Kim, K.W. %T La fête urbaine comme reconstruction de la ville contemporaine %B Le voyage inachevé... à Joël Bonnemaison %C Paris (FRA) ; Paris %D 1998 %E Guillaud, Dominique %E Seysset, M. %E Walter, Annie %L fdi:010017374 %G FRE %I ORSTOM ; PRODIG %@ 2-7099-1424-7;2-2901560-35-0 %K ANTHROPOLOGIE CULTURELLE ; FETE ; SOCIETE URBAINE ; RELIGION ; RITUEL ; PURIFICATION ; SACRE ; MYTHE D'ORIGINE ; ORGANISATION SOCIALE %K BELGIQUE ; FRANCE %K WALLONIE ; BINCH ; PERPIGNAN %P 599-606 %U https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010017374 %> https://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/exl-doc/pleins_textes/divers4/010017374.pdf %W Horizon (IRD) %X In modern societies, citizens can, by holding street festivals, shape their cities and influence their planning in an unusual way, conform to their dreams : it allows them to obtain their own local identity, even if it is a transitory one. I discuss two different street festivals in Europe. One is the carnival of Binche (in the French speaking region of Wallonie, Belgium), the other is the Holy Week Procession in Perpignan (Roussillon, French Catalonia). By comparing these festivals held on opposite sides (geographically and chronologically) of the French cultural area, I will try to explain the way people are shaping their townscapes according to their own wills, in order to find something which is otherwise missing in the modern cities. (Résumé d'auteur) %$ 106ANTHRO1 ; 112CULTU