Remarks on the Influence of Climate, Situation, Nature of Country, Population, Nature of Food, and Way of Life
Author: William Falconer
Publisher:
Published: 1781
Total Pages: 604
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: William Falconer
Publisher:
Published: 1781
Total Pages: 604
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Falconer
Publisher:
Published: 1781
Total Pages: 608
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Working Group II.
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1998
Total Pages: 532
ISBN-13: 9780521634557
DOWNLOAD EBOOKCambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press, 1998.
Author: Ilya Lazarev
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2018-08-06
Total Pages: 278
ISBN-13: 0429818084
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book seeks to highlight the influence of the Enlightenment idea of social progress on the character of the "civilising mission" in early Australia by tracing its presence in the various "civilising" attempts undertaken between 1788 and 1850. It also represents an attempt to marry the history of the British Enlightenment and the history of settler-Aboriginal interactions. The chronological structure of the book, as well as the breadth of its content, will facilitate the readers’ understanding of the evolution of "civilising attempts" and their epistemological underpinnings, while throwing additional light on the influence of the Enlightenment on Australian history as a whole.
Author: David N. Livingstone
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 2011-07-15
Total Pages: 538
ISBN-13: 0226487261
DOWNLOAD EBOOKHere, David Livingstone and Charles Withers gather essays that deftly navigate the spaces of science in this significant period and reveal how each is embedded in wider systems of meaning authority, and identity.
Author: Kevis Goodman
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2023-01-17
Total Pages: 318
ISBN-13: 0300243960
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn original study of late Enlightenment aesthetics, poetics, and environmental medicine as overlapping ways of comprehending the dislocations of historical existence lodged in the movements of bodies and minds This book studies later eighteenth-century medicine, aesthetics, and poetics as overlapping forms of knowledge increasingly concerned about the relationship between the geographical movements of persons displaced from home and the physiological or nervous "motions" within their bodies and minds. Looking beyond familiar narratives about medicine and art's shared therapeutic and harmonizing ideals, this book explores Enlightenment and Romantic-era aesthetics and poetics in relation to a central but less well known area of eighteenth-century environmental medicine: pathology. No mere system of diagnosis or classification, philosophical pathology was an art of interpretation, offering sophisticated ways of reading the multiple conditions and causes of disease, however absent from perception, in their palpable, embodied effects. For medical, anthropological, environmental, and literary authors alike, it helped to locate the dislocations of modern mobility when a full view of their causes and conditions remained imperfectly understood or still unfolding. Goodman traces the surprising afterlife of the period's exemplary but unexplained pathology of motion, medical nostalgia, within aesthetic theory and poetics, arguing that nostalgia persisted there not as a named condition but as a set of formal principles and practices, perturbing claims about the harmony, freedom, and free play of the mind.
Author: V. Jankovic
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2010-10-11
Total Pages: 380
ISBN-13: 023011346X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book explores the social origins of the Western preoccupation with health and environmental hazards. It looks at the rise of the dichotomy between the vulnerable 'in' and the threatening 'out' by examining the pathologies associated with weather, domestic space, ventilation, clothing, and travel in Britain at the turn of the 19th century.
Author: Emanuel Green
Publisher:
Published: 1902
Total Pages: 646
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Anthony J. Barker
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2022-09-21
Total Pages: 256
ISBN-13: 1000647560
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe African Link, first published in 1978, breaks new ground in the studies of pre-19th century racial prejudice by emphasizing the importance of the West African end of the slave trade. For the British, the important African link was the commercial one which brought slave traders into contact with the peoples of West Africa. Far from remaining covert, their experiences were reflected in a vast array of scholarly, educational, popular and polemical writing. The picture of Black Africa that emerges from these writings is scarcely favourable – yet through the hostility of traders and moralising editors appear glimpses of respect and admiration for African humanity, skills and artefacts. The crudest generalisations about Black Africa are revealed as the inventions of credulous medieval geographers and of the late 18th century pro-slavery lobby. The author combines the more matter-of-fact reports of the intervening centuries with analysis of 17th and 18th century social and scientific theories to fill a considerable gap in the history of racial attitudes.
Author: Glen Colburn
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Published: 2009-10-02
Total Pages: 305
ISBN-13: 1443814857
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe eleven essays collected in The English Malady: Enabling and Disabling Fictions adopt perspectives from a variety of disciplines—history, sociology, music, theater, and literary studies—in order to examine manifestations of and writing about hysteria in Europe during the long eighteenth century. The collection demonstrates not only that hysteria was an important cultural metaphor for the Enlightenment—a fact sometimes obscured by scholarly emphasis on the study of hysteria as a nineteenth and early twentieth-century phenomenon—but also that the period’s writers sometimes considered hysteria a blessing as well as a curse. Implicit in the various arguments of this collection is the suggestion that hysteria might be considered an expression of early modern ambivalence about the emergence of modernity.