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Hidden pathways : a study of interrelationships among Native and African Americans in 18th century VirginiaChic, Ciara L. January 2010 (has links)
There are gaps within American history that overlook histories of other cultures that are embedded and interwoven in this nation’s history. The voices of Natives and African- Americans have been drowned out by dominating Eurocentric views and documentation. This study will document and analyze the entangled histories of Natives and Africans in Virginia during the early colonial period. The purpose of my study is to examine more in depth the relationships and interactions between Native Americans and Africans through historic documents and material cultural studies. I want to find out why and how these peoples formed cross-cultural and created hybrid bonds and cultures through community development, marriage and kinship during the 18th century. This study will cross the boundaries of race, ethnicity, gender, class and nationalism and contribute to a deeper understanding of intersectional processes. It will also demonstrate that relationships between Africans and American Indians were prevalent in the Virginia colony and the Upper Southeastern region as a whole. / Introduction -- Theory and literature review -- Historical context -- Race and racism -- Contact of Natives and Africans -- Conclusion. / Department of Anthropology
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Bodies, knowledge and authority in eighteenth-century infanticide prosecutionsSommers, Sheena. 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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'Let nature never be forgot' : plein-air landscape sketching by British artists in Italy, c. 1750-1800Dorkin, Molly Karen January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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The politics of presence: stagecraft and the power of the body in the romantic imaginationNuss, Melynda 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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The politics of ritual in Puebla de los Ángeles, Mexico, 1695-1775Ramos, Frances Lourdes 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Kant's aesthetic theoryElder, Walter January 1950 (has links)
No description available.
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English book-reviewing, 1749-1800Sutcliffe, Denham January 1943 (has links)
No description available.
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From humility to action : the shifting roles of nuns in Bourbon Mexico City, 1700-1821Lowery-Timmons, Jason J 06 May 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Making hospitals "worthy of their purpose" : hospitals and the hospital reform movement in the généralité of Rouen (1774-1794)Robichaud, Marc January 2003 (has links)
The eighteenth century was a period ripe with challenges for hospitals in France. Denounced as ineffective, inefficient and even inhumane institutions, hospitals found themselves at the centre of a growing debate over the administration of health care and welfare. Although dismissing the hospital's traditional role as a refuge for the poor, the indigent and the sick, many reformers believed that this institution still could play a valuable social role. Thus, while contemporaries lashed out against the large, "abuse-ridden," hopitaux generaux and hotels-Dieu , small hospitals were seen in a more favourable light. For the growing number of contemporaries who argued that hospitalisation should be reserved exclusively for the sick, hospitals containing a small number of beds were promoted as better disposed and better equipped to meeting the health-care needs of the community. At the same time, contemporaries began calling for the decentralization of health care and welfare services. Instead of focusing these services in large regional poor-relief institutions, reformers argued that the poor and the sick would be better served by receiving assistance in their own community, either in small parish hospitals, or within their own home (secours a domicile). / This dissertation examines how hospitals and hospital services in the late eighteenth-century generalite of Rouen responded to this growing hospital reform movement. It shows that many of the policies adopted by the region's hospital administrators reflected the contents of the larger "national" debate on health care and welfare reform. More importantly, the military was behind many of the changes affecting hospital services in this region During the eighteenth century, military hospitals became a model to emulate towards making the "reformed" hospital a reality. However, imposing military-style health standards on the region's civilian hospitals proved to be a complicated process, one that often involved a great deal of negotiation and compromise.
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Novikov, freemasonry and the Russian enlightenmentWebster, William Mark January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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