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Visitation rights (and wrongs): Americans and Russians discover each other in narratives of travel between 1867 and 1905Marinova, Margarita Dimitrova 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Collecting and picturing the orient: China's impact on nineteenth-century European ArtWong, Mei-kin, Maggie., 黃美堅. January 2003 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Fine Arts / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Nineteenth-century Italian cemeteries : the social and political basis of funerary architectureMalone, Hannah Olivia January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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The urban back garden in England in the nineteenth centuryCrisp, Zoë Francesca January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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British politics and the rethinking of empire, c. 1830-1855Middleton, Alexander James January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Religion and clericalism in the nineteenth century novel in SpainCelaya, Ida Isabel, 1898- January 1933 (has links)
No description available.
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Accommodating feminism : Victorian fiction and the nineteenth-century women's movementDredge, Sarah. January 2000 (has links)
The research field of this thesis is framed by the major political and legal women's movement campaigns from the 1840s to the 1870s: the debates over the Married Women's Property Act; over philanthropy and methods of addressing social ills; the campaign for professional opportunities for women, and the arguments surrounding women's suffrage. I address how these issues are considered and contextualised in major works of Victorian fiction: Anne Bronte's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848), Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South (1855), Charlotte Bronte's Villette (1853), and George Eliot's Middlemarch (1871--2). / In works of fiction by women, concepts of social justice were not constrained by layers of legal abstraction and the obligatory political vocabulary of "disinterest." Contemporary fiction by women could thus offer some of the most developed articulations of women's changing expectations. This thesis demonstrates that the Victorian novel provides a distinct synthesis of, and contribution to, arguments grouped under the rubric of the "woman question." The novel offers a perspective on feminist politics in which conflicting social interests and demands can be played out, where ethical questions meet everyday life, and human relations have philosophical weight. Given women's traditional exclusion from the domain of legitimate (authoritative) speech, the novels of Gaskell, the Bronte's, and Eliot, traditionally admired for their portrayal of moral character, play a special role in giving voice to the key political issues of women's rights, entitlements, and interests. Evidence for the political content and efficacy of these novels is drawn from archival sources which have been little used in literary studies (including unpublished materials), as well as contemporary periodicals. Central among these is the English Woman's Journal. Conceived as the mouthpiece of the early women's movement, the journal offers a valuable record of the feminist activity of the period. Though it has not been widely exploited, particularly in literary studies, detailed study of the journal reveals close parallels between the ideological commitments and concerns of the women's movement and novels by mid-Victorian women.
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The Jewish convert in Czarist Russia /Avrich-Skapinker, Mindy B. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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The Irish tithe war, 1830-1838 /Montgomery, Thomas January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Binaries, boundaries, and hierarchies : the spatial relations of city schooling in Nanaimo, British ColumbiaBrown, Helen Harger 05 1900 (has links)
Urban School Boards and City Councils in British Columbia worked in
tandem with provincial officials in Victoria to expand the state school system in
the 1890s. In discharging their responsibilities, the Boards functioned with
considerable independence. They built and maintained schools, appointed and
ranked teachers, and organized students. During the course of the decade, City
Councils acquired the responsibility for school finance. Nineteenth-century
British Columbia education history, written from a centralist perspective, has
articulated the idea of a dominant centre and subordinate localities, but this
interpretation is not sufficient to explain the development of public schooling in
Nanaimo hi the 1890s. The centralist interpretation does not allow for the real
historical complexity of the school system. Neither does it accommodate the
possibility of successful local resistance to central initiatives, nor the extent to
which public schooling was produced locally.
It is important, then, to examine what kind of context Nanaimo constituted
for state schooling in the last years of the century. This study concludes that civic
leaders and significant interest groups in the community believed schooling
played an important boundary making role in forging civic, racial, gender, and
occupational identities. In carrying out their interlocking responsibilities for
providing physical space and organizing teachers and students, the Nanaimo
School Trustees created opportunities for local girls and, within limits, for women.
The Trustees limited opportunities for local men, and went outside the community
for men who had the professional credentials which were increasingly desirable in
the late-nineteenth century. Both the traditions of self-help and the imperatives
of corporate capitalism intersected in school production in late-nineteenth
century Nanaimo. The focus on securing identities through the differentiating
processes of boundaries and hierarchies which was evident in Nanaimo was
typical of a wider colonial discourse at the end of the nineteenth century.
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