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Michael Stanley-Baker started the topic COVID-19 Teaching Resources – Call for Contributions, Invitation to Use in the discussion
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoIf you want to contribute or use teaching resources on COVID-19, come visit this site and get involved.
Teach311+COVID-19 Collective is a collective of educators, researchers, artists, students and survivors spanning disciplinary and linguistic boundaries who study and teach about disasters. Our collaborative process…[Read more]
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Michael Stanley-Baker started the topic Call for Papers:Palgrave Encyclopedia of Health Humanities in the discussion
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoThe editors are inviting scholars to participate in the The Encyclopaedia of Health Humanities to be published by Springer Nature (under the imprint of Palgrave Macmillan). This will be the first reference volume of the health humanities of its kind. Entries are sought with a lower limit of approximately 500-1,000 words and an upper limit of no…[Read more]
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Cristina León Alfar deposited Speaking Truth to Power as Feminist Ethics in Richard III in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoIn this essay Queen Margaret’s curses in Richard III become part of a feminist ethics on the early modern stage. As a parrhesiast, in Foucault’s terms, Margaret speaks truth to power and claims a right of citizenship. That Margaret elicits universal revulsion from the other characters while also holding a unique, though not untroubled, pos…[Read more]
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Annika McQueen deposited Inns and Innkeeping in North Hertfordshire: 1660 – 1815 in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoThis dissertation ‘Inns and Innkeeping in North Hertfordshire: 1660-1815’ addresses the lack of a localised study on this building type and supplements the wider body of work that has been undertaken, on inn form, function and innkeeping lifestyles in other regions of England during the long eighteenth century.
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Flavia De Nicola deposited Nuove acquisizioni sulla prima attività romana di Michelangelo Buonarroti connessa con l’Umanesimo dei Pomponiani in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoYoung Michelangelo Buonarroti’s experience was deeply marked by his cult of Antiquity, reverberated in the creation of artworks such as the Sleeping Cupid and the Bacchus and shared with Raffaele Riario and Jacopo Galli, his patrons during his first stay in Rome (1496-1501). The cardinal-camerlengo Raffaele Riario was an important promoter of t…[Read more]
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Flavia De Nicola deposited Equus infoelicitatis: analisi iconografica di una xilografia dell’Hypnerotomachia Poliphili fra testo e immagine in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThe peculiar iconography of the winged horse surmounted by several puttos, as appears in the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili sixth woodcut, turns out to be unprecedented and enigmatic at a glance and it’s the result of the depth and complexity of the author’s concepts. Considering the iconographic details of the sculptural group as well as the text sca…[Read more]
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Martine van Elk deposited Female Glass Engravers in the Early Modern Dutch Republic in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThis essay explores glass engravings by Dutch authors Anna Roemers Visscher, Maria Tesselschade
Roemers Visscher, and Anna Maria van Schurman. I place these engravings in their rich contemporary
contexts, comparing them to other art forms that were the product of female pastime. Like
embroidery, emblems, and alba amicorum, engraved glasses…[Read more] -
Danielle Skjelver started the topic Call for Peer Reviewers in the discussion
Printing History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThe History of Applied Science & Technology Open Access Textbook editors seek peer reviewers for all regions and all periods.
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Dominik Hünniger deposited Policing Epizootics. Legislation and Administration during Outbreaks of Cattle Plague in Eighteenth-Century Northern Germany as Continuous Crisis Management in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThis chapter analyzes administrative efforts to control epizootic disease in eighteenth-century Schleswig-Holstein as disaster management. It points to the importance of quarantine, slaughter, and the control of trade as the principal methods adopted by governments and draws links with the methods used to control plague in humans. The chapter…[Read more]
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Paul W. Nash deposited The “first” type of Gutenberg: a note on recent research in the group
Printing History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThe “first” type of Gutenberg: a note on recent research (2004). This article has been somewhat superseded by the work of Christoph Reske, published in Gutenberg-Jahrbuch (2015).
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Cristina León Alfar started the topic New publication in the discussion
Renaissance/ Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoAlfar, Cristina León “Speaking Truth to Power as Feminist Ethics in Richard III.” Social Research: An International Quarterly, vol. 86, no. 3, Nov. 2019, pp. 789–819. (Available through ProjectMuse muse.jhu.edu/article/741025.)
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Yan Brailowsky deposited Ab ovo or in medias res? Rewriting History for the Early Modern Stage Or, How Elizabethan History Plays Collapsed Referentiality in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoShakespeare’s representations of history often have replaced history itself in the popular imagination: Julius Caesar, Margaret of Anjou, Henry V, Richard III — popular recollections of their lives and deaths are intimately linked with Shakespeare’s accounts of their stories, despite the playwright’s deviations from historical facts. In order t…[Read more]
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Ernesto Priego deposited I Know How This Ends: Stories of Dementia Care in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoI Know How This Ends is the second volume in a series that started with Parables of Care: Creative Responses to Dementia Care (2017). The project explores the potential of comics to enhance the impact of dementia care research. This comic book presents, in synthesised form, stories crafted from narrative data collected via interviews with…[Read more]
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Yan Brailowsky deposited La nuit genrée ou l’obscure clarté des scènes anglaises in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoGendered night, or the nocturnal brightness of the early modern English stage
In French, critics speak of the night using feminine terms, but the term is grammatically neutral in English. Despite this neutrality, night may be gendered. In Romeo and Juliet, virgins hide their shame from their lovers by hiding in the dark. If night is consecrated…[Read more] -
Yan Brailowsky deposited Reconnaissance et « acknowledgment » sur la scène élisabéthaine in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoFor poets like Sir Philip Sidney, the numerous incongruities found in Elizabethan drama fly in the face of Aristotelian theory. London audiences in 1580-1600 would have been hard pressed to recognize the time and place of the action represented on stage from one scene to the next. By comparing Greek theory and Elizabethan practice, this paper…[Read more]
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Yan Brailowsky deposited ‘My bliss is mixed with bitter gall’: gross confections in Arden of Faversham in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoWhat might strike some as Arden of Faversham’s faulty construction may perhaps be ascribed to the fact that Arden’s murderers, as well as the play’s audience, had to learn how to “temper poison” (i.229). Poison is not simply a means to commit murder, its use also requires great dexterity, one which must be interpreted within a historical and metat…[Read more]
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Todd Comer deposited An Introduction: Disability Studies and Ecocriticism in the group
Medical Humanities on Humanities Commons 6 years agoStudies in the Humanities 46, 1-2 (2020)
This PDF includes the contents of volume 46 (1-2) of Studies in the Humanities. It also includes the opening critical introduction to the volume dedicated to disability studies and ecocriticism.
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Paul W. Nash deposited The “first” type of Gutenberg: a note on recent research (2004) in the group
Printing History on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThe “first” type of Gutenberg: a note on recent research (2004). This article has been somewhat superseded by the work of Christoph Reske, published in Gutenberg-Jahrbuch (2015).
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Paul W. Nash started the topic Journal of the Printing Historical Society 31 in the discussion
Printing History on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThe latest number of the Printing Historical Society Journal is out (just in time for Saturnalia). It contains Michael Twyman on the production and circulation of electrotypes for horticultural catalogues by Vilmorin-Andrieux & Cie; the second part of Martyn Ould’s essay on “Printing at the Bible Press, Oxford, 1769–1772”; Katharina Walter on “…[Read more]
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