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Paul Michael Kurtz deposited The Philological Apparatus: Science, Text, and Nation in the Nineteenth Century in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoPhilology haunts the humanities, through both its defendants and its detractors. This article examines the construction of philology as the premier science of the long nineteenth century in Europe. It aims to bring the history of philology up to date by taking it seriously as a science and giving it the kind of treatment that has dominated the…[Read more]
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Scott Oldenburg deposited A Weaver-Poet and the Plague: Labor, Poverty and the Household in Shakespeare’s London in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoWilliam Muggins, an impoverished but highly literate weaver-poet, lived and wrote in London at the turn of the seventeenth century, when few of his contemporaries could even read. A Weaver-Poet and the Plague’s microhistorical approach uses Muggins’s life and writing, in which he articulates a radical vision of a commonwealth founded on labor and…[Read more]
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Scott Oldenburg deposited The Tempest and Race in New Orleans in the group
Shakespeare on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoThis article examines The Tempest in light of artists’ renderings of the play in New Orleans, reflecting on anti-Black racism in Shakespeare’s play and in the Deep South.
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Scott Oldenburg deposited The Tempest and Race in New Orleans in the group
Early Modern Theater on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoThis article examines The Tempest in light of artists’ renderings of the play in New Orleans, reflecting on anti-Black racism in Shakespeare’s play and in the Deep South.
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Scott Oldenburg deposited Thomas Tusser and the Poetics of the Plow in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoThis essay argues that Thomas Tusser’s popular book of georgic verse, Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry, offered a counter to developments in courtly poetry under Elizabeth I. Critics have long disparaged Tusser’s poetry as naïvely rustic, but Tusser was not an uneducated peasant who happened to pick up enough literacy to pen a book of poem…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited Medicine and International Relations in the Caribbean: Some Historical Variants in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoMedicine has long framed race relations in the Caribbean-that basin where African and European cultures have met from the beginning of the Colonial Period to the twentieth century. Whether Sir Hans Sloane, founder of the British Museum and President of the Royal Society of London, who as a physician wrote about African medical beliefs and…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited Gonzalo Fernós Maldonado y El Espacio para la Ciencia en Puerto Rico in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoGonzalo Fernós Maldonado (1887-1966) fue uno de los arquitectos más destacados en Puerto Rico durante las primeras dïcadas del siglo XX, cuyos logros y habilidades lamentablemente han quedado en el olvido colectivo. Este libro, escrito por su nieto, trata de resucitar la historia de su vida en un momento histórico muy diferente al con…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited Science Still Born: The Rise and Impact of the Pan American Scientific Congresses, 1898-1916 in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoThe Pan-American Scientific Congresses ushered a new scientific era in Latin America. Bringing together scientists, engineers, and medical researchers from both South and North America, they facilitated the exchange of ideas between the two regions at the beginning of the twentieth century. Nobel Prize thinkers such as Albert Michelson and others,…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited Science and Sovereignty: Western Ideas about Science and Nation and their Expression in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoScience and democracy are two of the most cherished values of Western Civilization, so much so that they are often associated with each other. With science, it is held, comes democracy. But, will democracy necessarily blossom with the seed of science? Inversely, does the collapse of the Arecibo Observatory on December 1, 2020 represent a predictor…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited From Galileo to Boltzmann: A History of the Fragility and Resilience of Science in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoWhen the same $9 billion allocated to a nation’s annual budget (Puerto Rico 2015) is spent on a single scientific instrument (Hubble telescope) or to administer a single scientific facility for a year (CERN), we might presume that science is today a monolithic enterprise, akin to what the pyramids of Ancient Egypt had been in their day. Yet when…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited Amistad y Progreso: Los Congresos Científicos Pan-Americanos, 1898-1916 in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoLos Congresos Científicos Pan-Americanos abrieron una nueva época de intercambio científico no solamente dentro de los pa?ses de América Latina sino entre estos y los Estados Unidos. Figuras importantes como Albert. A. Michelson, ganador del Premio Nobel en 1907, regularmente atendieron estas conferencias, así ayudando a difundir los últimos avanc…[Read more]
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Rodrigo Fernos deposited Biology and Ethics in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 8 months agoBiology and Ethics provides a historian’s perspective of the attempts to ground an ethics within a biological framework. Aside from its analysis of schools as social Darwinism, eugenics, and sociobiology, it attempts to evaluate their veracity using cases as Japan’s Unit 731, the Guatemala Syphilis study, and others. In spite of the much disputed…[Read more]
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Maciej Junkiert deposited Nowi Grecy. Historyzm polskich romantyków wobec narodzin Altertumswissenschaft in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months agoThe purpose of this book is to analyse the role which the development of the German Altertumswissenschaft at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries had (in combination with the English-French intellectual base) on the birth of the Romantic reception of the ancient traditions in Poland.
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Marie Tanner deposited April 2021 Renaissance Quarterly review of “Sublime Truth and the Senses Titian’s Poesie for King Philip II of Spain” in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 9 months ago“Tanner weaves a compelling scholarly narrative, spellbinding in its encyclopedic circumference….her text provides comprehensive historical and ideological context to comprehend the paintings as they would have been understood by their highly educated sixteenth-century patron and Renaissance humanist viewers.” Renaissance Quarterly, Volume…[Read more]
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Cristina León Alfar deposited Reading Mistress Elizabeth Bourne Marriage, Separation, and Legal Controversies in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months ago*Reading Mistress Elizabeth Bourne Marriage, Separation, and Legal Controversies,* Edited by Cristina León Alfar and Emily G. Sherwood, Routledge 2021, The Early Modern Englishwoman, 1500-1750: Contemporary Editions. “Reading Mistress Elizabeth Bourne tells the story of Mistress Bourne’s petition for divorce, its resolution, and her ongoing di…[Read more]
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Marie Tanner deposited Titian’s Mythological Paintings for KIng Philip II of Spain in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThe publication of my book, Sublime Truth and the Senses: Titian’s Poesie for King Philip II of Spain, ( Harvey Miller: 2019), with a new reading of the heightened meaning of ecstatic imagery for the Hapsburg court, coincides with the exhibition of Titian’s magnificent mythological paintings that are reassembled for the first time since 1704 a…[Read more]
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Dominik Hünniger deposited The “Normative Forces” of Difference: Ecology, Economy and Society during Cattle Plagues in the Eighteenth Century in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoOne of the recurring themes in the public perception of containment policies during the current COVID-19 pandemic are the supposedly uneven and everchanging measures taken up by international, national and local authorities. This is especially the case in countries with a federal structure, like Germany. Not surprisingly, historical containment…[Read more]
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Jeremy Fradkin deposited Protestant Unity and Anti-Catholicism: The Irenicism and Philo-Semitism of John Dury in Context in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoThis article examines the religious and political worldview of the Scottish minister John Dury during the English Revolution of the mid-seventeenth century. It argues that Dury’s activities as an irenicist and philo-semite must be understood as interrelated aspects of an expansionist Protestant cause that included Britain, Ireland, continental…[Read more]
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Marianne Groep-Foncke deposited Water’s worth. Urban society and subsidiarity in seventeenth-century Holland in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoBy taking water as a viewpoint, this dissertation reveals that the urban communities of seventeenth-century Holland were highly subsidiary in nature. Individual townspeople, men and women alike, knew how to fend for themselves, incidentally having recourse to other inhabitants, businessmen, corporations or magistrates. Together, they constituted a…[Read more]
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