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Bellizismus und Nation : Kriegsdeutung und Nationsbestimmung in Europa und den Vereinigten Staaten 1750 - 1914 /Leonhard, Jörn. January 2004 (has links)
Zugl.: Heidelberg, Univ., Habil.-Schr., 2004.
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Italian anarchists in London (1870-1914)Di Paola, Pietro January 2004 (has links)
This thesis is a study of the colony of Italian anarchists who found refuge in London in the years between the Paris Commune and the outbreak of the First World War. The first chapter is an introduction to the sources and to the main problems analysed. The second chapter reconstructs the settlement of the Italian anarchists in London and their relationship with the colony of Italian emigrants. Chapter three deals with the activities that the Italian anarchists organised in London, such as demonstrations, conferences, and meetings. It likewise examines the ideological differences that characterised the two main groups in which the anarchists were divided: organisationalists and anti-organisationalists. Italian authorities were extremely concerned about the danger represented by the anarchists. The fourth chapter of the thesis provides a detailed investigation of the surveillance of the anarchists that the Italian embassy and the Italian Minster of Interior organised in London by using spies and informers. At the same time, it describes the contradictory attitude held by British police forces toward political refugees. The following two chapters are dedicated to the analysis of the main instruments of propaganda used by the Italian anarchists: chapter five reviews the newspapers they published in those years, and chapter six reconstructs social and political activities that were organised in their clubs. Chapter seven examines the impact that the outbreak of First World Word had on the anarchist movement, particularly in dividing it between interventionists and anti-interventionists; a split that destroyed the network of international solidarity that had been hitherto the core of the experience of political exile. Chapter eight summarises the main arguments of the dissertation.
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The Americanization of French Louisiana : a study of the process of adjustment between the French and the Anglo-American populations of Louisiana, 1803-1860 /Newton, Lewis William. January 1980 (has links)
Doct. th.--phil.--Chicago, 1929. / Bibliogr. p. 227-235.
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Nineteenth-century German-trained architects in North AmericaQuail, ,Sarah P. January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Sodome à Paris : protohistoire de l'homosexualité masculine fin XVIIIe - milieu XIXe sièclePastorello, Thierry 31 March 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Au cours d'une période que l'on peut situer entre la dernière partie du XVIIIe et la première moitié du XIXe siècle l'homosexualité masculine en tant que fait spécifique est en cours de construction en prenant en exemple une ville comme Paris. On assiste à un foisonnement de discours et de perceptions autour des pratiques sexuelles et amoureuses entre hommes et le développement d'une subculture sodomite. Au fur et à mesure que le juridique évolue entre des textes qui condamnent la sodomie au bûcher et une pratique qui privilégie la répression policière, l'homosexualité masculine est stigmatisée comme particulière et asociale. Une nouvelle forme de discours médical émerge grâce au concours qu'il doit apporter à l'homme de loi. L'homosexualité est atteinte principalement par la répression des outrages aux mœurs et par l'action répressive de la police. Si des subcultures homosexuelles existent, les discours sur l'homosexualité paraissent avoir peu d'influence sur les pratiques, en prenant comme exemple certains éléments des classes populaires urbaines et des hommes notoires. L'homosexualité reste au terme de cette période en cours de construction. Alors que ce fut un nouveau moment dans la construction de l'homosexualité, des analyses en termes de genre persistaient.
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Charles Darwin's debt to the RomanticsLansley, Charles Morris January 2016 (has links)
The thesis examines the principal works of Charles Darwin to determine whether there is any evidence of Romantic concepts in his writings and whether, therefore, he owes a debt to the Romantics such as Alexander von Humboldt and Goethe. The first two chapters of the thesis trace the influence of Alexander von Humboldt (1769 – 1859) on Charles Darwin (1809-1882). There are frequent references to Humboldt in Darwin’s works. Humboldt’s Romantic concepts of Nature, expressed in his Personal Narrative [1807 – 1834] and in his later Cosmos [1845], are compared to Darwin’s concepts of Nature in his On the Origin of Species [1859, first edition]. An analysis of Humboldt shows him firmly within the German Romantic school of thought with influences from Schelling and Goethe, especially concerning the concept of Mind. Humboldt’s method of analysing Nature aesthetically had a profound effect on Darwin’s own imaginative view of Nature. Further analysis of this method, coupled with Goethe’s ‘Genetic Method’ of moving between the particular and the infinite when seeing the ‘leaf’ and ‘vertebrae’ archetypes, shows strong evidence of the influence of the German Romantics on the development of Darwin’s theory of natural selection. In analysing the Romantic concept of a ‘One Reality Nature’, the thesis shows that Darwin’s evidence of a common progenitor provides a moral imperative for treating all races as equal in terms of their origins and their potential for development. In Chapter Three the origins of morality are seen by Darwin as having been generated by natural instincts rather than having come from a Creator. This is examined with reference to Darwin’s The Descent of Man [1871; 1879, second edition] within the moral and cultural context of the Victorian era in which he lived. The final Chapter Four compares The Voyage of the Beagle [1839, first edition] to Darwin’s later works to see if there are differences between his earlier and later forms of Romanticism and how easily they sit alongside Darwin the Victorian. The thesis concludes that essentially Darwin’s Romantic theme of wonder and enchantment is the same for both his early and later years. However, Darwin’s Romanticism has moved from an anthropocentric view with Man as its centre to an anthropomorphic view in which Man is seen as part of Nature but not at its centre. Darwin’s self-expression in his writing has also moved from a subjective form of poetry developed through his personal experience of Nature, to a more objective form of poetic science in which Darwin is able to step back from the science he creates. Finally, the Conclusion suggests that there is sufficient evidence in Darwin’s works to claim that he can be regarded as a Romantic materialist. This is evidenced by his view that Mind and Man’s morality have been developed by Nature’s laws out of matter. It is also evidenced by Darwin’s own mental methods of discovery through his own form of imagination and poetry, sharing some of the themes of the English Romantic poets such as Wordsworth and Tennyson.
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