%0 Journal Article %T A Capa e batina. Le para tre ¨¦tudiant dans la ville universitaire de Coimbra (Portugal) %A S¨¦verine Carrausse %J Apparence(s) : Histoire et Culture du Para£¿tre %D 2012 %I IRHiS-Septentrion %X La ville universitaire de Coimbra est aujourd¡¯hui encore le lieu o¨´ un ensemble de pratiques li¨¦es ¨¤ la tradition ¨¦tudiante locale se d¨¦ploient. Transf¨¦r¨¦ de Lisbonne ¨¤ Coimbra en 1537, le corps acad¨¦mique se distinguait alors par ses habits universitaires et op¨¦rait d¨¨s lors par son mode de vie une division tant sociale qu¡¯urbaine. Toujours pr¨¦gnante, la tradition acad¨¦mique, appel¨¦e Praxe, est mise en sc¨¨ne par la population universitaire dans des topographies et des temporalit¨¦s sp¨¦cifiques. Le costume solennel des ¨¦tudiants, a capa e batina, renforce la normalisation de cette coutume ¨¦tudiante qui est ouvertement donn¨¦e ¨¤ voir ; ses usages et ses espaces d¡¯action sont autant d¡¯indices de la repr¨¦sentation ¨¦tudiante et de son ¨¦volution depuis le Moyen ge. Nous montrerons ainsi en quoi la ville de Coimbra et la cape noire de l¡¯¨¦tudiant font l¡¯¨¦tudiant, en quoi ces deux symboles sont, dans le jeu du para tre, garants d¡¯une identit¨¦ provisoire et consensuelle, ¨¤ savoir ¨ºtre ¨¦tudiant. A Capa e batina. The university students'appearances in the university town of Coimbra (Portugal) - The university town of Coimbra still remained a place where a whole set of practices linked to local university students¡¯ tradition are highly present. Having moved from Lisbon to Coimbra in 1537, the university staff and students were then distinguished by their formal dress and by their lifestyles which brought about a social and urban division. Still very much in use, this academic tradition, called Praxe, is played out by the university population into specific topographies and temporalities. The formal dress of university students, a capa e batina reinforces the normalization of this academic custom which is openly displayed ; its uses and its spaces of action all are indications of the university student¡¯s representation and of its evolution since the Middle Ages. We will show in which way the city of Coimbra and the black cape constitute the identity of the university student, and in how those two symbols are, within a problematic of appearances, the tokens of a provisional and consensual identity: being a university student. %K clothing %K Portugal %K university students¡¯ tradition %K identity %K v¨ºtement %K Portugal %K coutumes ¨¦tudiantes %K identit¨¦ %U http://apparences.revues.org/1190