École normal supérieure Lettres et sciences humaines
ENS LSH | |
---|---|
activity | 1880, re-established 2000 - January 1, 2010 (merger with ENS Lyon ) |
Sponsorship | state |
place | Lyon , France |
Rector | Olivier Faron |
Website | www.ens-lsh.fr |
The École normal supérieure Lettres et sciences humaines (ENS LSH) was a French Grande École that belonged to the network of Écoles normales supérieures .
history
The ENS LSH was the successor to the ENS in Fontenay and in Saint-Cloud , which were founded in 1880 and 1882 by the French educational reformer Jules Ferry to guarantee high quality teacher training. With the aim of decentralization and the technical reorganization of the ENS, the École Normale Supérieure de Fontenay / Saint-Cloud was formed in 1987 , which moved to Lyon in 2000 and was renamed École normal supérieure Lettres et sciences humaines . It comprised the entire humanities branch of the previous universities, while the natural science part had been located in Lyon since 1987 under the name École normal supérieure de Lyon . On January 1, 2010, the humanities-oriented institution was merged with ENS Lyon (natural science orientation).
Education
Admission to the course took place via a nationwide admissions process after attending two-year preparatory classes . The students accepted in this way were given the designation élève normalien and were accepted into the civil service with a salary for a period of 10 years. In addition, students who came from universities could apply for each subsequent academic year and then study at the ENS LSH as free auditors or as international scholarship holders.
The college had four faculties: literature and arts, languages, humanities and social sciences.
After the first year the students received the license ( bachelor ) and after two more years the master (magister). However, after the first Master's year, the Agrégation was usually prepared for one year , an examination for the higher teaching degree, so that the entire course at the ENS LSH lasted 4 years.
Famous Graduates
(Graduates of the ENS LSH and their predecessors. The year of admission in brackets.)
- Pierre-Marc de Biasi , literary scholar and sculptor
- Pierre Bergounioux (1969), writer
- Jean-Claude Carrière (1953), writer, screenwriter and actor
- Roger Chartier (1964), historian, professor at the Collège de France
- Philippe Descola (1970), anthropologist , professor at the Collège de France
- Roger-Pol Droit (1949), journalist and philosopher
- Jacques Dupâquier (1942), founder of the Institute for Historical Demography, member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
- Alain Finkielkraut (1969), philosopher
- Jean-Michel Gaillard (1966), senior civil servant
- André Glucksmann (1957), philosopher
- Maurice Godelier (1955), anthropologist
- Pierre Goubert (1935), historian
- Georges Hyvernaud (1919), writer
- Jean Jacquart (1947), historian
- Noël Josèphe (1951), politician
- Marc Kravetz (1961)
- Pascal Lainé (1962), writer ( Prix Goncourt )
- Georges Lemoine (1956), German studies specialist, former minister
- Yves Le Pestipon , literary scholar and writer
- Amadou Madougou (1967), politician
- Gérard Miller (1968), political scientist and psychoanalyst
- Jean-François Muracciole , historian
- Maurice Nadeau (1931), literary critic, writer and publisher
- Mazarine Pingeot (1994), journalist and writer
- Marceau Pivert (1919), trade unionist
- Christian Renoux , historian
- Daniel Roche (1956), historian, former professor at the Collège de France
- Henry Rousso (1974), historian
- Jean-Pierre Sueur (1966), linguist , senator
- René Taton , mathematics and science historian
- Michel Vovelle (1953), historian
Famous professors
- Golo Mann (1933–1935) (editor), German historian, writer and philosopher