928 resultados para historic and literary Academies
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El presente artículo se plantea como objetivo el análisis de la evolución estructural y morfológica de un espacio urbano de rango y tamaño modestos, Castro Urdiales (Cantabria), desde su condición histórica de villa marinera hasta su consolidación como ciudad industrial moderna. Desde una perspectiva metodológica, la parte más substancial del análisis de la dinámica urbanística se apoya esencialmente en el uso de las imágenes cartográficas, como referencias documentales que proporcionan datos y testimonios que no se encuentran en otras fuentes. No obstante, como sucede con otras fuentes documentales, la información obtenida de mapas y planos ha sido combinada y complementada con otro tipo de fuentes coetáneas a las cartográficas. Y, por descontado, se han adoptado las oportunas precauciones, similares a las tomadas con las fuentes escritas, sobre posibles errores de información mediante el contraste y la comparación de unas y otras fuentes, cartográficas y literarias.
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European science policy (so-called Horizon 2020) is guided by Grand Societal Challenges (GSCs) with the explicit aim of shaping the future. In this paper we propose an innovative approach to the analysis and critique of Europe’s GSCs. The aim is to explore how speculative and creative fiction offer ways of embodying, telling, imagining, and symbolising ‘futures’, that can provide alternative frames and understandings to enrich the grand challenges of the 21st century, and the related rationale and agendas for ERA and H2020. We identify six ways in which filmic and literary representations can be considered creative foresight methods (i.e. through: creative input, detail, warning, reflection, critique, involvement) and can provide alternative perspectives on these central challenges, and warning signals for the science policy they inform. The inquiry involved the selection of 64 novels and movies engaging with notions of the future, produced over the last 150 years. Content analysis based on a standardised matrix of major themes and sub-domains, allows to build a hierarchy of themes and to identify major patterns of long-lasting concerns about humanity’s future. The study highlights how fiction sees oppression, inequality and a range of ethical issues linked to human and nature’s dignity as central to, and inseparable from innovation, technology and science. It concludes identifying warning signals in four major domains, arguing that these signals are compelling, and ought to be heard, not least because elements of such future have already escaped the imaginary world to make part of today’s experience. It identifies areas poorly defined or absent from Europe's science agenda, and argues for the need to increase research into human, social, political and cultural processes involved in techno-science endeavours.
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Publisher varies.
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Has vol. t.p. title: Antijacobin review and Protestant advocate, or, Monthly political and literary censor.
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None of the American edition published after part 4. Parts 5 and 6 have imprinted: London, G, Routledge and sond, limited, 1931-35.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Has vol. t.p. title: Antijacobin review and Protestant advocate, or, Monthly political and literary censor.
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This book examines testimony in the works of Rebecca West, Joseph Conrad, E.M. Forster, H.G. de Lisser, V.S Reid, and Ngũgi wa Thiong’o, and argues that disruptions to imperial and national power and the legal and legal responses they inspired shape the formal practices of modernist and Anglophone literature. This title was made Open Access by libraries from around the world through Knowledge Unlatched.
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How can the modern individual control his or her self-representation when the whole world seems to be watching? This question is a familiar one amid the the twenty-first century's architecture of 24-hour newsrooms, chat rooms and interrogation rooms, but this book traces this question back to the stages, the pages, and the streets of eighteenth-century London--and to the strange and spectacular self-representations performed there by England's first modern celebrities. These self-representations include the enormous wig that the actor, manager, and playwright Colley Cibber donned in his most famous comic role as Lord Foppington--and that later reappeared on the head of Cibber's cross-dressing daughter, Charlotte Charke. They include the black page of 'Tristram Shandy,' a memorial to the parson Yorick (and his author Laurence Sterne), a page so full of ink that it cannot be read. And they include the puffs and prologues that David Garrick used to hiehgten his publicity while protecting his privacy; the epistolary autobiography, modeled on the sentimental novel, of Garrick's protégée George Anne Bellamy; and the elliptical poems and portraits of the poet, actress, and royal courtesan Mary Robinson, known throughout her life as Perdita. Linking all of these representations is a quality that Fawcett terms "over-expression." 'Spectacular Disappearances' theorizes over-expression as the unique quality that allows celebrities to meet their spectators' demands for disclosure without giving themselves away. Like a spotlight so brilliant it is blinding, these exaggerated but illegible self-representations suggest a new way of understanding some of the key aspects of celebrity culture, both in the eighteenth century and today. They also challenge many of the disciplinary divides between theatrical character and novelistic character in eighteenth-century studies, or between performance studies and literary studies today. Drawing on a wide variety of materials and methodologies, 'Spectacular Disappearances' provides an overlooked but indispensable history for scholars and students of celebrity studies, performance studies, and autobiography--as well as to anyone curious about the origins of the eighteenth-century self.
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There are two volumes for each year, each volume and monthly number having a t.-p. The general title-pages for the year 1737 read: The History of the works of the learned: giving a general view of the state of learning throughout Europe.
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v.1, 3, 5. Autobiographical and political--v.2, 4, 6. Critical and literary.
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Includes bibliographic footnotes.
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"Chronological tables of Greek and Roman history, civil and literary, from the first Olympiad, B.C. 776, to the fall of the Western Empire, A.D. 476. With tables of Greek and Roman measures, weights, and money. Ed. by William Smith ... ": p. [957]-1039.
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A combination of two separate works by the respective authors; vols. 1-3, by Cook, published under titles "America, picturesque and descriptive," "Pen pictures of America", and "The Anglo-Saxons historic and romantic America". Vols. 4-5, by Forbes-Lindsay, pub. under title: "America's insular possessions".
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Mode of access: Internet.