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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

"Suffering, shame and the search for succour" : incurable illness in nineteenth-century France

Szabo, Jason January 2004 (has links)
Abstract not available. / Until now, historians have devoted relatively little attention to the rich field of patients' struggles with chronic progressive disease. This study proposes to begin to fill this lacuna by examining in detail the meaning and implications of one central principle of nineteenth-century clinical medicine: incurability. Though the judgement of incurability is the product of a medical encounter, its significance extended well beyond the clinic. For being incurable in nineteenth-century France was a social event in the broadest sense, putting the individual at the centre of a complex web of people with different expectations and duties. Patients and their farnilies sought relief and solace within the confines of their homes and, frequently enough, in hospital. The physician was expected to prognosticate and to heal, while women, usually members of the immediate family or a religious order, carried out the duties of daily care. Either by choice or institutional diktat, many incurably ill individuals were visited by a priest or some other representative of the Church. Finally, their lives were deeply influenced by the decisions of local and, to an ever increasing degree, national politicians mandated to tackle questions of charity and social policy. Each chapter of this thesis will examine facets of the experience of incurability within the context of existing social structures: medical, religious, economic, and political.
42

What Was in the Doctor's Bag?: A Material Culture Study of the Performance of Medicine in Antebellum New England

Dudley, Anú King January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
43

"The Dead Shall be Raised": The Egyptian Revival and 19th Century American Commemorative Culture

Giguere, Joy M. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
44

For a space to teach: Acadian teachers in public schools in eastern Nova Scotia, 1811-1864

Sweet, David Bradley 30 September 2005 (has links)
This doctoral thesis concerns the Acadian teachers in the public schools of the eastern counties of Nova Scotia between the years 1811 and 1864. The early Acadian public school teachers provided the Acadians, the French speaking population, in Nova Scotia, instruction in their own French language even under legal constraints to do otherwise. The region covered in this dissertation includes the counties found on Cape Breton Island and the counties of Antigonish and Guysborough on the mainland portion of the province between 1811 the year of adoption of the first Education Act in Nova Scotia concerning public education and concludes with the 1864 Education Act which created a homogenous unilingual school system in English. Acadian education would progress from small groups of children taught by itinerant school masters and visiting mission priests to formal one-room school houses where numbers were sufficient. Lay teachers being found in the communities would perpetuate the French language following their own education at the few available institutions for training. The work of these Acadian public school teachers, even when legislation prohibited it, resulted in the survival of the Acadian French communities in eastern Nova Scotia. In the preparation of this thesis, original sources were used including school reports, school commissioner reports, and colonial census records, private journals of the bishops and priests as well as those of community members. The original sources are invaluable as a record of the year to year work of the Acadian public school teachers where there are few other documentary sources remaining of their work. While the origins of the public schools in Nova Scotia has been documented as well as Acadian schools, this is the first look at the Acadian public school teachers who worked in the various communities of eastern Nova Scotia and their backgrounds. / Educational Studies / D.Ed. (History of Education)
45

The social and political theories of John Ruskin. --.

Avison, Henry Reade Charles. January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
46

"Suffering, shame and the search for succour" : incurable illness in nineteenth-century France

Szabo, Jason January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
47

Agrarian economy and agrarian relations in Bengal, 1859-1885

Chaudhuri, B. B. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
48

The data of alienism : evolutionary neurology, physiological psychology, and the reconstruction of British psychiatric theory, c. 1850-c. 1900

Clark, Michael January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
49

Time for favour : Scottish missions to the Jews, 1838-1852

Ross, John Stuart January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
50

Upholding the sacred teachings

Yu, Shiu-nung., 余劭農. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese Historical Studies / Master / Master of Arts

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