998 resultados para 1926
Resumo:
1926/03/02 (A27,N34).
Resumo:
1926/12/10 (A27,N188).
Resumo:
A pesar de que la disimetría de las dos vertientes de los Pirineos, en cuanto a clima y vegetación, es un hecho bien conocido, sobre el que insisten, por ejemplo, GATJSSEN (1926), BRAUN-BLANQUET (1948) y SOLÉ SABARÍS (1951), hasta el momento poco se ha dado a conocer acerca de la expresión fitosociológica de la misma.
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1926/05/31 (A27,N82).
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1926/12/13 (A27,N189).
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1926/12/07 (A27,N186).
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1926/05/27 (A27,N80).
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1926/12/09 (A27,N187).
Resumo:
The present article proposes Heathcliff and Sarah Woodruff as monstrous beings who reclaim their desire to be agent subjects in a society and a narrative which deny such a possibility. It would be possible to argue, however, that their monstrosity might be that of the unique specimen, the potential first stage towards the improvement of species through natural selection as theorized by Charles Darwin in 1859. The multiple references to Darwin’s study in the novel by JohnFowles demonstrate that such a theory could clarify what Sarah represents in the novel. In a retroactive manner, Darwinian theory might be used to understand what Heathcliff is, who Heathcliff is, and why he is the object of general animosity. It might be concluded that what is really monstrous about these twocharacters is that both are new specimens, avant la lèttre, and they occupy a space to which language has no access.
Resumo:
1926/05/28 (A27,N81).
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1926/12/06 (A27,N185).
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1926/05/21 (A27,N78).
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1926/12/02 (A27,N183).
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1926/05/25 (A27,N79).
Resumo:
1926/05/20 (A27,N77).