Search results for "19th"

showing 10 items of 188 documents

De Musica Disserenda, XII/1, 2016: Nineteenth-Century Music in Central Europe: Paradigms and Popular Canon

2016

Nations and nationalism have been a main research topic for decades, but the last few years have witnessed noticeable growth in these studies. The perspective generally accepted in the humanities – that demands for political independence of the nations in nineteenth-century Central Europe were premised on a sense of cultural identity – has also been taken up by contemporary musicological thought. Essays by philosopher and social anthropologist Ernest Gellner on “invented nations” in Nations and Nationalism (1983), or by historian and political scientist Benedict Anderson on “imagined communities” in Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (1991), supported …

19th-Century Music Mitteleuropa Paradigms Popular and Art Music Germany Austria Poland Bohemia Slovenia CroatiaSettore L-ART/07 - Musicologia E Storia Della Musica
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The Rise of Finnish-Language Popular Literacy Viewed through Correspondence to Newspapers 1856–70

2014

In the mid-19th century, a significant number of persons among the Finnish-speaking rural populace learned to read fluently and write for the first time. One of the first purposes to which Finnish-speakers could put their writing was letters to the press. This paper first provides a brief overview of how rural Finnish-speaking commoners acquired functional literacy. It then examines what letters to newspapers written by self-educated commoners reveal about writers’ motives, the uses to which writing could be put in mid- 19th century Finland, and the tensions which arose when newly literate commoners began to criticize their social superiors in the press and no longer needed their help in re…

19th-centurysocial hierarchylukutaitolanguage rightscommon folksanomalehdetthe presssecularizationFinlandlukeminenkirjoittaminen
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Learning from the past in the COVID-19 era: rediscovery of quarantine, previous pandemics, origin of hospitals and national healthcare systems, and e…

2020

Abstract After the dramatic coronavirus outbreak at the end of 2019 in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, on 11 March 2020, a pandemic was declared by the WHO. Most countries worldwide imposed a quarantine or lockdown to their citizens, in an attempt to prevent uncontrolled infection from spreading. Historically, quarantine is the 40-day period of forced isolation to prevent the spread of an infectious disease. In this educational paper, a historical overview from the sacred temples of ancient Greece—the cradle of medicine—to modern hospitals, along with the conceive of healthcare systems, is provided. A few foods for thought as to the conflict between ethics in medicine and shortage of personne…

2474Economic growth030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyHistory 18th Centurylaw.invention0302 clinical medicineCholeralawPandemicechocardiographyMedicine030212 general & internal medicineHealth WorkforceHistory AncientEthics and LawHistory 15th CenturyHealth Care RationingHistory 19th CenturyGeneral Medicinecongenital heart diseaseHospitalsHistory 16th CenturyQuarantinesymbolsCoronavirus InfectionsHealthcare systemCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Pneumonia ViralCardiologyHistory 21st CenturyResource AllocationHistory 17th Century03 medical and health sciencessymbols.namesakeBetacoronavirusLeprosyQuarantineHumansEthics MedicalChinaPandemicsHippocratic OathPlaguepaediatric cardiologybusiness.industrySARS-CoV-2OutbreakCOVID-19History 20th CenturyHistory MedievalUnited StatesInfectious disease (medical specialty)Hippocratic OathbusinessPostgraduate medical journal
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Timoteo Calvo Ibarra (1799-1879). Un arquitecto valenciano durante el reinado de Isabel II.

2015

In the complex scene of valencian architecture of 19th century, Timoteo Calvo Ibarra should be considered as one of the most representative authors. In his designs and interventions, such as the Literary University, the construction of new Cathedral’s Altarpiece, they are apparent the peculiarities of the first Historicism, coincident with Isabelline period. In this first stage of historicism, the homogeneity and guarantee of good taste that classicism provided was no longer valid as unique option and it will be simultaneous with romantic architecture represented by the first historicist experiences, which will conclude with the burst onto the scene of the eclecticism in the restoration of …

: Timoteo Calvo Ibarra valencian architecture academism historicism 19th century.Settore ICAR/18 - Storia Dell'ArchitetturaTimoteo Calvo Ibarra arquitectura valenciana academicismo historicismo siglo XIX.
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La pena de trabajos forzados en los códigos penales decimonónicos

2018

This paper is an study about the penalty of forced labor, inside the historical and legal framework in which took place the criminal law codification of 19th century (Criminal Codes of 1822, 1848 and 1870) and the departure from the Criminal Law of Ancient Regime

:CIENCIAS JURÍDICAS [UNESCO]trabajos forzados.penaltyCriminal codificationUNESCO::CIENCIAS JURÍDICASIris This paper is an study about the penalty of forced laborpena2386-4567 22661 Actualidad jurídica iberoamericana 502169 2018 9 6653340 La pena de trabajos forzados en los códigos penales decimonónicos Barceló Ferreinside the historical and legal framework in which took place the criminal law codification of 19th century (Criminal Codes of 18221848 and 1870) and the departure from the Criminal Law of Ancient Regime Codificación penalforced labor. 538 585
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Rewinding Frankenstein and the body-machine: organ transplantation in the dystopian young adult fiction seriesUnwind

2016

While the separation of body and mind (and the entailing metaphor of the body as a machine) has been a cornerstone of Western medicine for a long time, reactions to organ transplantation among others challenge this clear-cut dichotomy. The limits of the machine-body have been negotiated in science fiction, most canonically in Mary Shelley9s Frankenstein (1818). Since then, Frankenstein9s monster itself has become a motif that permeates both medical and fictional discourses. Neal Shusterman9s contemporary dystology for young adults, Unwind , draws on traditional concepts of the machine-body and the Frankenstein myth. This article follows one of the young protagonists in the series, who is en…

AdultLiterature Modernmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentMedicine in LiteratureMetaphorSciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectOrgan transplantationPathology and Forensic MedicineMind-Body Relations Metaphysical03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBody ImagemedicineHumansNarrativeSociologymedia_commonLiteratureDystopiabusiness.industry05 social sciences050301 educationCornerstoneHistory 19th CenturyOrgan TransplantationMythologyMythologyPhilosophyAestheticsEmbodied cognitionMetaphorbusiness0503 education030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMonsterMedical Humanities
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More than a leap of faith: the impact of biological and religious correlates on reproductive behavior.

2004

Using a conceptual model that integrates both social and biomedical factors of causation, this paper tries to delineate the pathways through which the reproductive characteristics of a multidenominational community are characterized. In total, 5513 historical entries from family reconstitution were available. Selection of data was guided by the inclusion of information about religious affiliation. Only married couples with children as well as single mothers with the relevant information were considered. Of these, 1855 entries were of Roman Catholic (C), 1143 of Lutheran/Protestant (L/P2), and 609 of Reformed Calvinist (R) denomination. The analysis documented differential nuptiality and fer…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectFertilityReproductive BehaviorHistory 18th CenturyLeap of faithBiological FactorsProtestantismSociologyGermanyGeneticsHumansFamilySociologyCausationMarriageSociocultural evolutionGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonHistorical demographyHistorical ArticleHistory 19th CenturySingle mothersHistory 20th CenturyModels TheoreticalReligionParitySocioeconomic FactorsFemaleSeasonsSocial psychologyMaternal AgeHuman biology
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Children’s Diet during the Early Stages of the Nutritional Transition. The Foundlings in the Hospital of Valencia (Spain), 1852–1931

2021

The nutritional transition brought about profound changes in the nutrition of the European population in the 19th and 20th centuries. The predominant consumption of cereals gave way to kilocalorie-, protein-, vitamin- and mineral-rich diets that involved a greater intake of animal products. However, not all population groups underwent this transition at the same pace

Adultnutritional balanceCalorieinequalityHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPopulationNutritional StatusStandard of livingArticleAge groupsMedicineHumanshospital dietseducationeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industrydigestive oral and skin physiologyRPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEuropean populationliving standardsHospitalsDietHomogeneousSpain19th and 20th centuriesMedicinenutritional transitionchildren nutritionbusinessEdible GrainDemographyInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Da Akrágas a Girgenti. Architettura e paesaggio nelle descrizioni e nell’iconografia della “città dei templi” fra Settecento e Ottocento

2016

Quando Gioacchino Di Marzo, intorno alla metà dell’Ottocento, intraprende l'opera di traduzione in italiano del Lexicon topograficum siculum di Vito Amico, dato alle stampe fra il 1757 e 1760, sente l'esigenza di dovere emendare incisivamente la voce dedicata alla città di Agrigento, in cui l'abate catanese aveva concesso alla città antica soltanto alcune brevi notazioni intorno ai templi antichi – fatta eccezione per il tempio di Giove Olimpico – soffermandosi invece sulla «novella Girgenti» e fornendo notizie dettagliate su tutti gli edifici degni di nota presenti nella città. Il tentativo di Di Marzo di colmare una simile lacuna – ingiustificabile a suo modo di vedere – scrivendo una lun…

Agrigento antiquities travellers 18th century 19th centurySettore ICAR/18 - Storia Dell'ArchitetturaAgrigento antichità viaggiatori XVIII secolo XIX secolo
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Beatas sojuzgadas por el clero: la imagen de las mujeres en el discurso anticlerical en la España del primer tercio del siglo XX

2003

En los últimos años la historia cultural ha llamado la atención sobre la importancia de la representación, principalmente por sus repercusiones en la construcción de identidades individuales y colectivas y por sus implicaciones en el terreno político. Este artículo analiza cómo representaba a las mujeres el discurso anticlerical difundido por la prensa republicana y obrera en la España del primer tercio del siglo XX, y qué imágenes gráficas se utilizaban para ilustrarlo. Muestra que existía un antifeminismo de izquierdas basado en el anticlericalismo, cuyos efectos políticos se hicieron especialmente visibles durante la II República, en la medida en que sirvió para cuestionar el reconocimie…

AnticlericalismoAntifeminismoMujerWomanAnticlericalismSiglos XIX-XXAntifeminismIdentities19th-20th centuryIdentidadesFeminismo/s
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