950 resultados para Rankin, Judy , 1945 -
Resumo:
This thesis examines how married couples bought and created a modern home for their families in suburban Glasgow between 1945-1975. New homeowners were on the cusp of the middle-classes, buying in a climate of renters. As they progressed through the family lifecycle women’s return to work meant they became more comfortably ensconced within the middle-classes. Engaged with a process of homemaking through consumption and labour, couples transformed their houses into homes that reflected themselves and their social status. The interior of the home was focused on as a site of social relations. Marriage in the suburbs was one of collaboration as each partner performed distinct gender roles. The idea of a shared home was investigated and the story of ‘we’ rather than ‘I’ emerged from both testimony and contemporary literature. This thesis considers decision-making, labour and leisure to show the ways in which experiences of home were gendered. What emerged was that women’s work as everyday and mundane was overlooked and undervalued while husband’s extraordinary contributions in the form of DIY came to the fore. The impact of wider culture intruded upon the ‘private’ home as we see they ways in which the position of women in society influences their relationship to the home and their family. In the suburbs of post-war Glasgow women largely left the workforce to stay at home with their children. Mothers popped in and out of each other houses for tea and a blether, creating a homosocial network that was sociable and supportive unique to this time in their lives and to this historical context. Daily life was negotiated within the walls of the modern home. The inter-war suburbs of Glasgow needed modernising to post-war standards of modern living. ‘Modern’ was both an aesthetic and an engagement with new technologies within the house. Both middle and working-class practices for room use were found through the keeping of a ‘good’ or best room and the determination of couples to eat in their small kitchenettes. As couples updated their kitchen, the fitted kitchen revealed contemporary notions of modern décor, as kitchens became bright yellow with blue Formica worktops. The modern home was the evolution of existing ideas of modern combined with new standards of living. As Glasgow homeowners constructed their modern home what became evident was that this was a shared process and as a couple they placed their children central to all aspects of their lives to create not only a modern home, but that this was first and foremost a family home
Resumo:
Tesis de Licenciatura en Historia
Resumo:
O principal objectivo desta dissertação é o de conhecer um pouco melhor o processo de implementação das Santas Casas de Misericórdia no Brasil, dando especial ênfase à sua expansão durante o período de consolidação da República brasileira, mais concretamente entre 1922 a 1945. A necessária contextualização levou a pesquisa sobre as Misericórdias até à fase colonial e imperial do Brasil, acabando por demonstrar que as mesmas se fortaleceram no segmento de assistência médica, durante o período em análise, tomando o Estado brasileiro dependente das suas actividades. Este trabalho discute ainda o imaginário social da caridade e filantropia e a forma como tais preceitos configuraram a assistência médico-social no país. ABSTRACT; This dissertation aims to better know the implementation process of the Santas Casas de Misericórdia in Brazil, highlighting their expansion during the Republic, mainly between 1922 and 1945. For a better historical contextualization the study explores the Brazil's colonial and imperial phases, demonstrating that the Misericórdias progressively strength their power in the medical assistance segment, becoming the State dependent of their activities. The dissertation also discusses the philanthropy and charity's collective social imagery, as well as the way in which such concepts shaped the medico-social assistance in the country.
Resumo:
Rezension von: Oskar Anweiler/Hans-Jürgen Fuchs/Martina Dorner/Eberhard Petermann (Hrsg.): Bildungspolitik in Deutschland 1945-1990. Ein historisch-vergleichender Quellenband. Opladen: Leske + Budrich 1992, 574 S.
Resumo:
La Compañía Metropolitano Alfonso XIII llevó a cabo, a principios del siglo XX, la empresa de dotar a la capital española de un ferrocarril subterráneo a la altura de otras ciudades europeas: el Metro de Madrid. Del proyecto original de cuatro líneas, la 3 y la 4 se construyeron e inauguraron en plena guerra civil y en los primeros años del franquismo (1936-1945). Esta última fecha es significativa, puesto que poco después de abierta al público la línea 4 (que convertía al metropolitano por fin en una red mallada), murió su primer arquitecto oficial, Antonio Palacios Ramilo, relevante proyectista de la primera mitad del siglo XX, responsable de emblemáticos edificios del centro de la capital (Círculo de Bellas Artes, Palacio de Correos, Banco Español del Río de la Plata...). En su calidad de arquitecto oficial de la Compañía Metropolitano Alfonso XIII, diseñó no sólo las estaciones, bocas y templetes del metro de Madrid, sino también toda una serie de edificios auxiliares entre los que destacan las centrales y subestaciones eléctricas. Explicaremos la evolución de la red de metro en los comienzos del franquismo y analizaremos la arquitectura subterránea que Palacios diseñó para el ferrocarril metropolitano, centrándonos en las llamadas líneas "de los barrios bajos" y "de los bulevares", la planificación de la estación de Sol como centro neurálgico de la red y en cómo los modelos de barandillas, accesos y decoración interior que ideó Antonio Palacios se siguieron utilizando hasta mucho después de su muerte, si bien otros elementos no subsistieron al paso del tiempo y la llamada "modernización" del Metro que se llevó a cabo en los años 60 y 70. También estudiaremos el modo de intervención de Palacios en la arquitectura industrial respecto al resto de su obra y haremos especial hincapié en el estado en que se encuentra actualmente este patrimonio, distinguiendo entre los casos en los que ha habido una intervención restauradora (Nave de Motores en Pacífico, Estación de Chamberí), los que están en desuso (subestaciones de Quevedo y Salamanca...) y los elementos que ya han desaparecido (templetes de Sol y Gran Vía).
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
This dissertation addresses the broader antecedents of the Communist Party of Albania (CPA) as one of a number of associations whose experience was central to Albanian political history. This long experience dates back to the informal national associations formed in the Ottoman Empire of the late nineteenth century. The dissertation examines the role of these associations which, pursuing language rights and political representation through imperial state reforms, set a pattern that struggled to connect nation and state, rather than asserting the territorial demands for a nation-state familiar across the region. Starting out in the Ottoman Empire, but then maturing in the Albanian diaspora in Romania, Bulgaria, Egypt and the United States, this dissertation shows politically significant processes of longer-term adaptation that created informal associations as institutional structures able to channel collective action. It then traces the reframing of these patterns through their destruction in the Balkan Wars and the First World War to the emergence of communist associations in the interwar period and beyond. This dissertation is a sustained study that traces long-term Ottoman imperial political legacies in the Albanian successor state. The story of the associations, based on hitherto unexamined archival documents, shows that the Albanians possessed a far greater capacity for political mobilization that previously acknowledged by historians. Moreover, the dissertation successfully challenges the conventional wisdom that portrays the Albanians as irreparably divided along sectarian and regional faultlines. It finds that Albanian national activism was civic in character rather than ethnic as elsewhere in the Balkans. The Albanians fought to remain within a multinational framework because this afforded them political security, social advancement and potential economic growth. In the late Ottoman period, this political objective was manifested in the acceptance of the supranational imperial order whereas during the Second World War, in the aspiration to become members of the Comintern internationalist movement. Another important find, is the newly-discovered evidence concerning the founding of the CPA and its wartime conduct as an organization created and led by the Albanians themselves, albeit with Yugoslav ideological assistance under the transnational umbrella of the Comintern.
Resumo:
MATERIAŁY SEMINARIUM JUBILEUSZOWEGO 70–lecia Obserwatorium Astronomicznego UAM, Zielonka, 1-3.06.1989 r.
Resumo:
In the 20th century, German education repeatedly transformed as the occupying Americans, Soviets, and western-dominated reunification governments used their control of the German secondary education system to create new definitions of what it meant to be German. In each case, the dominant political force established the paradigm for a new generation of Germans. The victors altered the German education system to ensure that their versions of history would be the prevailing narrative. In the American Occupation Zones from 1945-1949, this meant democratic initiatives; for the Soviet Zone in those same years, Marxist-Leninist pedagogy; and for the Bundesrepublik after reunification, integrated East and West German narratives. In practice, this meant succeeding generations of German students learned very different versions of history depending on the temporal and geographic space they inhabited, as each new prevailing regime supplanted the previous version of “Germanness” with its own.
Resumo:
Los estudiantes de la Escuela de Bachilleres de la Universidad de Nuevo León desarrollaron las prácticas militares como una forma de forjar un comportamiento varonil de austera disciplina, como sostén firme de la instrucción académica
Resumo:
La hija de Francisco M. Zertuche, abogada, actriz de cine y teatro, que fue dirigida por Juan José Gurrola y Alejandro Jodorowsky, y que cobró fama como vedette, fue un personaje incomprendido al que la UANL le rindió un homenaje a través de la Feria Universitaria del Libro UANLeer 2016
Resumo:
World War II profoundly impacted Florida. The military geography of the State is essential to an understanding the war. The geostrategic concerns of place and space determined that Florida would become a statewide military base. Florida’s attributes of place such as climate and topography determined its use as a military academy hosting over two million soldiers, nearly 15 percent of the GI Army, the largest force theUS ever raised. One-in-eight Floridians went into uniform. Equally,Florida’s space on the planet made it central for both defensive and offensive strategies. The Second World War was a war of movement, and Florida was a major jump off point forUSforce projection world-wide, especially of air power. Florida’s demography facilitated its use as a base camp for the assembly and engagement of this military power. In 1940, less than two percent of the US population lived in Florida, a quiet, barely populated backwater of the United States.[1] But owing to its critical place and space, over the next few years it became a 65,000 square mile training ground, supply dump, and embarkation site vital to the US war effort. Because of its place astride some of the most important sea lanes in the Atlantic World,Florida was the scene of one of the few Western Hemisphere battles of the war. The militarization ofFloridabegan long before Pearl Harbor. The pre-war buildup conformed to theUSstrategy of the war. The strategy of theUS was then (and remains today) one of forward defense: harden the frontier, then take the battle to the enemy, rather than fight them inNorth America. The policy of “Europe First,” focused the main US war effort on the defeat of Hitler’sGermany, evaluated to be the most dangerous enemy. In Florida were established the military forces requiring the longest time to develop, and most needed to defeat the Axis. Those were a naval aviation force for sea-borne hostilities, a heavy bombing force for reducing enemy industrial states, and an aerial logistics train for overseas supply of expeditionary campaigns. The unique Florida coastline made possible the seaborne invasion training demanded for USvictory. The civilian population was employed assembling mass-produced first-generation container ships, while Floridahosted casualties, Prisoners-of-War, and transient personnel moving between the Atlantic and Pacific. By the end of hostilities and the lifting of Unlimited Emergency, officially on December 31, 1946, Floridahad become a transportation nexus. Florida accommodated a return of demobilized soldiers, a migration of displaced persons, and evolved into a modern veterans’ colonia. It was instrumental in fashioning the modern US military, while remaining a center of the active National Defense establishment. Those are the themes of this work. [1] US Census of Florida 1940. Table 4 – Race, By Nativity and Sex, For the State. 14.
Resumo:
Each year the South Carolina Public Service Commission reports to the Office of State Budget that includes the agency's mission, goals and objectives to accomplish the mission, and performance measures regarding the goals and objectives.