Results for 'nineteenth-century nursing reform'

971 found
Order:
  1.  22
    Shifting boundaries: religion, medicine, nursing and domestic service in mid‐nineteenthcentury Britain.Carol Helmstadter - 2009 - Nursing Inquiry 16 (2):133-143.
    The boundaries between medicine, religion, nursing and domestic service were fluid in mid‐nineteenthcentury England. The traditional religious understanding of illness conflicted with the newer understanding of anatomically based disease, the Anglican sisters were drawing a line between professional nursing and the traditional role of nurses as domestic servants who looked after sick people as one of their many duties, and doctors were looking for more knowledgeable nurses who could carry out their orders competently. This prosopographical study (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  2.  18
    ‘Angels in nursing’: images of nursing sisters in a Lutheran context in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Susanne Malchau - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (4):289-298.
    This article examines Catholic nursing orders in Denmark. In 1849, 300 years after the Reformation, freedom of worship was introduced in Lutheran Denmark. In 1856 the first Catholic nursing order in modern times settled in the country. Others followed, and in 1940 the nursing orders owned 17 general hospitals and had a share of 10% of the hospital beds in Denmark. The purpose of this article is to identify images in the public media text of these Catholic (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  3.  17
    Nursing and the issue of ‘party’ in the Church of England: the case of the Lichfield Diocesan Nursing Association.Stuart Wildman - 2009 - Nursing Inquiry 16 (2):94-102.
    In recent years, there has been increased interest in the role of religion in the reform of nursing during the mid‐nineteenth century. However, less is known about how ‘party’ disputes between evangelicals and followers of the ‘Oxford Movement’ may have affected nursing. This study examines a proposal to create a nursing association for the Diocese of Lichfield in 1864, which leads to a public dispute concerning the ‘ecclesiastical’ nature of the organisation. Leading evangelicals in (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  4.  14
    Historical continuities and constraints in the professionalization of nursing.Sue Forsyth - 1995 - Nursing Inquiry 2 (3):164-171.
    Historical continuities and constraints in the professionalization of nursingThe support of medicine and the state may be crucial to nursing's current professional aspirations for legitimation and implementation of nursing reforms and for new roles for nurses in health care. As such, medicine and the state are in the invidious position of influencing nursing's occupational future. This situation is not new. An historical analysis of the establishment of nursing at Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia, at the end (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  5. Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century German Patriotism: Virtue, Cosmopolitanism, and Reform.Lydia L. Moland - 2020 - In Mitja Sardoč (ed.), Handbook of Patriotism. Cham, Switzerland: Springer.
    The early history of German patriotism is complex and illuminates many of patriotism’s potential virtues as well as its dangers. Throughout the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, patriotism’s overarching connotation was devotion to the greater good, but whether that greater was local, national, or global varied dramatically. Early uses of patriotism were devoid of national or military connotations and instead denoted local engagement in public projects and willingness to aid to those in need. The patriot moreover worked for (...)
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  6.  27
    Nineteenth Century Raspail: Scientist and Reformer. By Dora B. Weiner . New York, London: Columbia University Press. Pp. xiv + 336. Illustr. 1968. 99s. [REVIEW]Everett Mendelsohn - 1970 - British Journal for the History of Science 5 (1):103-105.
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  7.  26
    Theory and practice in nineteenth-century persian medicine: Intellectual and institutional reforms.Hormoz Ebrahimnejad - 2000 - History of Science 38 (2):171-178.
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  8.  19
    Reform in Nineteenth Century China.Stanley Spector, Paul A. Cohen & John E. Schrecker - 1982 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 102 (4):668.
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  9.  17
    Nineteenth-century American literature and the discourse of natural history.Juliana Chow - 2021 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    American cultural technologies of the early nineteenth century shaped Nature and the synonymous "native" in contradictory ways: celebrating the wilderness but then transforming it by cultivation, mourning lost "natives" (both people and species) while also naturalizing the succession of new Euro-American settlers. Settler colonial geopolitics understood its own territorial claims in association with the retreats, migrations, and expansions of select species populations: cattle replacing American bison or Euro-Americans replacing Indians on the western frontier. In this way, Euro-American descendants (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  10.  9
    Becoming Historical: Cultural Reformation and Public Memory in Early Nineteenth-Century Berlin.John Edward Toews - 2004 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book examines the ways in which selfhood and cultural solidarity came to be understood and lived as historical identities during the 1800s. It examines the stages and conflicts in the process of 'becoming historical' through the works of prominent Prussian artists and intellectuals who attached their personal visions to the reformist agenda of the Prussian regime that took power in 1840. The historical account of the evolution of analogous and inter-related commitments to a cultural reformation that would create communal (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  11.  16
    The Commemoration of the Reformation and Mid-Nineteenth-Century Evangelical Identity.John Wolffe - 2014 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90 (1):49-68.
    This article explores evangelical perceptions of the Reformation, with particular reference to the commemoration in 1835 of the tercentenary of the publication of Coverdales English Bible. The first half of the nineteenth century saw a growth in evangelical interest in the Reformation, although historical understanding of the sixteenth century was initially unsophisticated and simplistic equations between past and present were widespread. The 1835 commemoration exposed a tendency to use history as a tool in contemporary controversies between Anglicans (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  12.  19
    ‘Some of the Grandest and Most Illustrious Beauties of the Reformation’: John Elias and the Battle over Calvinism in Early-Nineteenth-Century Welsh Methodism.David Ceri Jones - 2014 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90 (1):113-134.
    This article seeks to re-examine the arguments among early nineteenth-century Welsh Calvinistic Methodists about Calvinist beliefs. In particular, it uses the example of John Elias to explore the appropriation and re-appropriation of aspects of the theological heritage of the sixteenth-century Reformation in Wales. Examining the tensions between Calvinism‘s tendency to ever stricter interpretation and pressure in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries to liberalize Calvinistic Methodisms position under the influence of evangelicalism, it argues that Elias (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  13.  17
    The Reformation Revised? The Contested Reception of the English Reformation in Nineteenth-Century Protestantism.Peter Nockles - 2014 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90 (1):231-256.
    This article charts and discusses the reasons for various significant shifts and developments during the nineteenth century of the reception of the Reformation amongst different denominations and groups within British Protestantism. Attitudes towards Foxes ‘Book of Martyrs’ are explored as but one among several litmus tests of the breakdown of an earlier fragile consensus based on anti-Catholicism as a unifying principle, with the Oxford Movement and the intra-Protestant reaction to it identified as a crucial factor. The selfidentity of (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  14.  41
    The Reformation of the Nineteenth Century.Richard M. Meyer - 1896 - International Journal of Ethics 7 (1):63-79.
    Direct download (6 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  15.  27
    A historical description of the tensions in the development of modern nursing in nineteenthcentury Britain and their influence on contemporary debates about evidence and practice.Michael Traynor - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (4):299-305.
    Modern British nursing developed from the mid‐nineteenth century and was seen as a morally purifying activity and as a potential force for social cohesion. It was also considered an activity fit for women. However, it embodied a fundamental tension within Victorian sensibility between a kind of rationalistic utilitarianism and a faith in transcendent values. This paper explores this tension and suggests that it can be detected in current debates about practice and evidence in nursing in the (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  16.  20
    The Historiography of Late Nineteenth-Century American Legal History.David M. Rabban - 2003 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 4 (2).
    Although the treatment of history in late nineteenth-century American legal scholarship remains largely unexplored, two recent areas of research have discussed this subject tangentially. Historiographical critiques of the emphasis on doctrine by American legal historians typically maintain that late nineteenth-century legal scholars viewed history as disclosing an inevitable evolutionary progression from primitive to civilized forms. This "whiggish" approach, the critiques add, ignored the context and function of past law while apologetically justifying conservative existing law as autonomous (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  17.  40
    Women in nineteenth century homeopathic medicine.Harriet A. Squier - 1995 - Journal of Medical Humanities 16 (2):121-131.
    The novels,Dr. Breen's Practice andDr. Zay provide the twentieth century reader with some interesting and intimate insights into nineteenth century homeopathy as practiced by two women physicians. It becomes apparent after reading these two books that the existing knowledge about women in homeopathic medicine is inadequate to answer the questions that the novels raise. More investigation in this area would help illuminate the motivations women had to enter medicine, as well as their reasons for choosing homeopathy over (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  18.  11
    Nineteenth-Century British Women's Education, 1840–1900.Susan Hamilton & Janice Schroeder (eds.) - 2007 - Routledge.
    This new six-volume collection from Routledge and Edition Synapse brings together key documents from the Victorian feminist campaign to establish and improve girls’ and women’s education. The set is divided into two sections, both of which incorporate materials that argue for the improvement of girls’ and women’s education as well as arguments made against education for girls and women. The first section focuses on the debate surrounding the quality of women’s education and the question of access to higher education for (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  19. European Thought in Nineteenth-Century Iran: David Hume and Others.Cyrus Masroori - 2000 - Journal of the History of Ideas 61 (4):657-674.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 61.4 (2000) 657-674 [Access article in PDF] European Thought in Nineteenth-Century Iran: David Hume and Others Cyrus Masroori European ideas have played a crucial part in the shaping of the modern Iranian intellectual climate, since Iranian intellectuals have been, one way or another, engaged with these ideas for at least a hundred and fifty years. This engagement has also influenced Iranian (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  20.  16
    High or Low? Writing the Irish Reformation in the Early Nineteenth Century.Alan Ford - 2014 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90 (1):93-112.
    The Irish Reformation is a contentious issue, not just between Catholic and Protestant, but also within the Protestant churches, as competing Presbyterian and Anglican claims are made over the history of the Irish reformation. This chapter looks at the way in which James Seaton Reid,, laid claim to the Reformation for Irish Dissent in his History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland. It then examines the rival Anglican histories by two High Churchmen: Richard Mant, Bishop of Down and Connor; and (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  21.  22
    Book Review of The Irony of Early School Reform: Educational Innovation in Mid-Nineteenth Century Massachusetts. [REVIEW]Kelly Ann Kolodny - 2004 - Educational Studies 36 (3).
    (2004). Book Review of The Irony of Early School Reform: Educational Innovation in Mid-Nineteenth Century Massachusetts. Educational Studies: Vol. 36, No. 3, pp. null.
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  22.  38
    The Homestead and the Garden Plot: Cultural Pressures on Land Reform in Nineteenth-Century Britain and the USA.Jamie Bronstein - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (2):159-175.
    (2001). The Homestead and the Garden Plot: Cultural Pressures on Land Reform in Nineteenth-Century Britain and the USA. The European Legacy: Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 159-175.
    No categories
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  23.  38
    Ideas and ideals in university reform in early nineteenthcentury Britain: A Scottish perspective.Donald J. Withrington - 1999 - The European Legacy 4 (6):7-19.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  24. The Idea of Social Reform and its Critique among Hindus of Nineteenth Century India.Amiya P. Sen - 2007 - In Sabyasachi Bhattacharya (ed.), Development of modern Indian thought and the social sciences. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 10--107.
    No categories
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  25.  4
    Bentham’s law reform association and the continuity of enlightenment in the nineteenth century.Cheng Li - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    The Law Reform Association came in the wake of the Catholic Relief Act of April 1829, a period of mounting opinions for further constitutional change. Through the Law Reform Association, Bentham wanted to mobilise people to support the application of his philosophy in Britain and beyond. He argued that the English legal profession had a sinister interest in manipulating other members of society, and that only codification based on utilitarianism would rectify the defects of the common law. By (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  26.  18
    Health by design: teaching cleanliness and assembling hygiene at the nineteenth-century sanitation museum.Hilary Buxton - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Science 51 (3):457-485.
    In 1878, amid a rapidly proliferating social interest in public health and cleanliness, a group of sanitary scientists and reformers founded the Parkes Museum of Hygiene in central London. Dirt and contagion knew no social boundaries, and the Parkes's founders conceived of the museum as a dynamic space for all classes to better themselves and their environments. They promoted sanitary science through a variety of initiatives: exhibits of scientific, medical and architectural paraphernalia; product endorsements; and lectures and certificated courses in (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  27.  19
    Profession of Revulsion: Subjective Science and the Mobilization of Emotions in Late Nineteenth-Century Russian Public Medicine.Maria Pirogovskaya - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):105-125.
    This essay explores the rhetoric used by Russian zemstvo physicians, scholars of medicine, and sanitary inspectors to share their expertise with regard to health problems in the last three decades of the nineteenth century. Borrowing the conceptual framework of emotional practices introduced by Monique Scheer, it interprets an appeal to revulsion and sensorial evidence, employed as “templates of language and gesture,” that medical practitioners produced both to mobilize the emotions of their audience and to support their own professional (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  28.  8
    Simon Szántó, Nineteenth Century Viennese Writer and Educator: A Study on Integration, Particularism, and the Ideal of Bildung.Sara Olga Melinda Yanovsky - 2021 - Naharaim 15 (2):221-242.
    Simon Szántó is known as one of the founders of the Jewish press in Vienna, the editor and main author of the Jewish periodical Die Neuzeit, and an influential educator during the high point of Austrian liberalism between the 1860s and the early 1880s. His enormously rich literary legacy covers issues such as the integration of Jews into the Austrian-Hungarian society, religious reform, gender roles, and particularly education. Szántó’s writings offer a unique opportunity to look at the Viennese liberal (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  29.  10
    Theology and the University in Nineteenth-Century Germany.Zachary Purvis - 2016 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Theology and the University in Nineteenth-Century Germany examines the dual transformation of institutions and ideas that led to the emergence of theology as science, the paradigmatic project of modern theology associated with Friedrich Schleiermacher. Beginning with earlier educational reforms across central Europe and especially following the upheavals of the Napoleonic period, an impressive list of provocateurs, iconoclasts, and guardians of the old faith all confronted the nature of the university, the organization of knowledge, and the unity of theology's (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  30.  20
    The Social Architect and the Myopic Mason: The Spatial Politics of the Muséum d'Histoire naturelle in Nineteenth-Century Paris.Paula Young Lee - 2007 - Science in Context 20 (4):601-625.
    ArgumentDuring the first half of the nineteenth century, the Muséum d'Histoire naturelle was both workplace and home to functionalist Georges Cuvier and morphologist Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, whose doctrinal differences became enmeshed with political dialogues regarding social reform. Surprisingly, the public not only viewed the arrangement of the collections in terms of the social platforms they were understood to be supporting, but critiqued the Muséum's buildings as expressions of their anatomical dispute. The Revolutions of 1830 and 1848 pushed (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  31.  13
    Booby Hatch or Booby Trap: A New Look at Nineteenth-Century Reform.Barbara Rosenkrantz - 1972 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 39.
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  32.  13
    Child care or child neglect?: Baby farming in late-nineteenth-century philadelphia.Sherri Broder - 1988 - Gender and Society 2 (2):128-148.
    This article examines baby farming as an urban neighborhood-based system of group child care in Philadelphia in the late nineteenth century and considers the dangers and abuses the practice of baby farming posed for parents, children, and baby farmers. It explores reformers' early efforts to regulate the city's baby farms. Finally, the essay also investigates the ways in which the residents of Philadelphia's poor neighborhoods monitored the child-care establishments in their communities that catered to working mothers.
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  33.  23
    Scientific uniformity or “natural” divine action: Shifting the boundaries of law in the nineteenth century.Nathan K. C. Bossoh - 2021 - Zygon 56 (1):234-253.
    In October 1862, the Duke of Argyll published an article in the Edinburgh Review entitled “The Supernatural.” In it, Argyll argued that contrary to the prevailing assumption, miracles were “natural” rather than “supernatural” acts of God. This reconceptualization was a response to the controversial publication Essays and Reviews (1860), which challenged orthodox Biblical doctrine. Argyll's characterization of a miracle was not novel; a number of early modern Newtonian thinkers had advanced the same argument for similar reasons. New in this (...)-century reconceptualization, however, were (1) the recent geological, physical, and evolutionary developments and (2) the introduction of German higher criticism. Argyll and the neo-Newtonians thus attempted to construct a philosophico-theological alternative, which would constitute a middle-position between the traditional acceptance and liberal rejection of miracles. I argue finally that 21st-century debates on divine action in fact exist as part of a longer historical tradition that dates back to Augustine. (shrink)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  34.  15
    Copyright and Social Movements in Late Nineteenth-Century America.Steven Wilf - 2011 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 12 (1):123-160.
    The cultural turn in copyright law identified authorship as a rhetorical construct employed by economic interests to strengthen claims to property rights. Grassroots intellectual property political movements have been seen as both a means of countering these interests’ everexpanding proprietary control of knowledge and establishing a more public regarding copyright system. This Article examines one of the most notable intellectual property political movements, the emergence of late nineteenth-century agitation to provide copyright protection for foreign authors as a social (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  35.  40
    The rise of alternative bread leavening technologies in the nineteenth century.Carolyn Ann Cobbold - 2018 - Annals of Science 75 (1):21-39.
    ABSTRACTThis article reveals how nineteenth-century chemists and health reformers tried to eradicate the use of yeast in bread, claiming they had devised healthier and more sanitary ways to raise bread. It describes the alternative technological solutions to baking bread, investigating factors that influenced their development and adaptation in the marketplace. A lack of scientific and cultural consensus surrounding yeast, what it was and what it did, fermented during this period. The conflict over yeast helped create a heterogeneous industrialization (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  36.  15
    Natural law and the law of nations in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Italy.Elisabetta Fiocchi Malaspina & Gabriella Silvestrini (eds.) - 2024 - Boston: Brill/Nijhoff.
    This volume sheds new light on modern theories of natural law through the lens of the fragmented political contexts of Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the dramatic changes of the times. From the age of reforms, through revolution and the 'Risorgimento', the unification movement which ended with the creation of the unified Kingdom of Italy in 1861, we see a move from natural law and the law of nations to international law, whose teaching was introduced in (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  37.  17
    Sioban Nelson. Say Little, Do Much: Nursing, Nuns, and Hospitals in the Nineteenth Century. 240 pp., notes, bibl., index. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001. $55. [REVIEW]Hermi Hyacinth Hewitt - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):733-733.
  38.  39
    ‘The emergency which has arrived’: the problematic history of nineteenth-century British algebra – a programmatic outline.Menachem Fisch - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (3):247-276.
    More than any other aspect of the Second Scientific Revolution, the remarkable revitalization or British mathematics and mathematical physics during the first half of the nineteenth century is perhaps the most deserving of the name. While the newly constituted sciences of biology and geology were undergoing their first revolution, as it were, the reform of British mathematics was truly and self-consciously the story of a second coming of age. ‘Discovered by Fermat, cocinnated and rendered analytical by Newton, (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  39.  25
    Challenges of a Frontier Region: The Case of Ottoman Iraq in the Nineteenth Century.Gökhan Çetinsaya - 2009 - In A. C. S. Peacock (ed.), The Frontiers of the Ottoman World. British Academy. pp. 271.
    Throughout its four centuries of Ottoman rule, Iraq remained a frontier of geographical, tribal, religious, economic and imperial boundaries. Iraq was an outlying region; it had a large Shi'i population; it remained a tribal and economically poor country; as a frontier region, it was vulnerable to invasion and peaceful penetration by foreign powers, Iran and Britain. The Ottoman central government expended considerable effort to overcoming these challenges, but proved unable to resolve them completely, and as a result, both its authority (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  40.  34
    Alex D. D. Craik. Mr. Hopkins' Men: Cambridge Reform and British Mathematics in the Nineteenth Century. xiv + 405 pp., illus., table, apps., bibl., indexes. New York: Springer, 2008. $49.95. [REVIEW]Karen Parshall - 2009 - Isis 100 (3):669-670.
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  41.  39
    Birth of the'Secular'Individual: Medical and Legal Methods of Identification in Nineteenth-Century Egypt.Khaled Fahmy - 2012 - In Fahmy Khaled (ed.), Registration and Recognition: Documenting the Person in World History. pp. 335.
    This chapter describes a number of medico-administrative and legal changes that were introduced in nineteenth-century Egypt and that gave rise to an individualized conception of identity. Prompted by the recruitment needs of a new conscript army, an administrative apparatus was put in place that gave rise to novel techniques of identifying peasants, monitoring their movements, and controlling their bodies. A wide-ranging public hygiene programme aimed at serving the army resulted in a statistical regime whose crowning achievement was a (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  42.  25
    Utilitarianism and Socialism in the Nineteenth Century.Ophélie Siméon - 2023 - Revue D’Études Benthamiennes 23.
    This special issue of the _ Revue d’études benthamiennes _ aims to examine the transmission and reception of utilitarian thought among various socialist movements in the nineteenth century, to shed light on their emergence, uses and legacy. By focusing on the originality and variety of these socialist reinterpretations, it builds upon renewed approaches in intellectual and political history that have successfully challenged the classical distinction between “utopian” and “scientific” socialism. Consequently, this issue brings a corrective to the tendency, (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  43.  29
    "They're in the Trade... of Lunacy: They 'Cannot Interfere'--They Say": The Scottish Lunacy Commissioners and Lunacy Reform in Nineteenth-Century Scotland. Jonathan Andrews. [REVIEW]Ellen Dwyer - 2000 - Isis 91 (3):617-618.
  44.  66
    Bentham, the Benthamites, and the Nineteenth-Century British Peace Movement.Stephen Conway - 1990 - Utilitas 2 (2):221.
    The influence exerted by the ideas of Jeremy Bentham has been a matter of controversy over many years. Assessments have varied greatly—ranging from the extravagantly generous to the utterly dismissive—but there has been broad agreement on the loci for investigation. Attention has focused on the social, administrative, and legal reforms of the Victorian age. The aim here is to explore a different and relatively neglected area—the part played by Bentham's thought in shaping the attitudes and programme of the nineteenth- (...) British peace movement. (shrink)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  45.  50
    Interplay Between Scientific Theories and Researches on the Diseases of the Nervous System in the Nineteenth-Century, Paris.Jean-Gaël Barbara - 2009 - Medicine Studies 1 (4):339-352.
    In this paper, my aim is to understand the origin of experimental and scientific models of pathogeny of the diseases of the nervous system in the Salpêtrière (Paris). I will analyse the role of the contexts of cell theory, microscopy and the advances in histological techniques in the creation of various pathogenic models, based on the concept of the cell, the Wallerian degeneration and the neurone concept. I argue that, as medicine and pathology remain autonomous in their methods and goals, (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  46.  71
    Rethinking the Debates on the Poor Law in Early Nineteenth-Century England.David Eastwood - 1994 - Utilitas 6 (1):97.
    One of the more interesting developments in recent historical writing has been a reconsideration of the debates over poor law reform. In the sharply-demarcated world of post-war scholarship, the poor law fell clearly, if somewhat problematically, into the domain of social history. For obvious contemporary reasons, post-war social history devoted a good deal of scholarly energy to constructing a history of social policy. Much of this work was problematized in terms of the then orthodox agenda of the welfare state. (...)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  47.  16
    Yo no sigo al romántico pedante. Guillermo Matta and the case of romantic politics in Chile for the mid-nineteenth century.Claudio Véliz Rojas & Sebastián Gutiérrez Lillo - 2021 - Alpha (Osorno) 52:31-42.
    Resumen: El siguiente trabajo pretende analizar la categoría de “romanticismo político” desarrollada por el filósofo alemán Carl Schmitt, aplicando su acepción de “política romántica” al caso del poeta-político chileno Guillermo Matta Goyenechea. Por medio de términos tales como imaginación, lenguaje cósmico, progreso moral, democracia, entre otros, este poeta-político articuló su discurso social durante el periodo de 1853 a 1858, como elementos de disputa con el poder regente bajo la intención de reformar la sociedad chilena de su época.: The present work (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  48.  37
    Book review: Utilitarianism and the Art School in Nineteenth-Century Britain, written by Malcolm Quinn. [REVIEW]Dave Beech - 2014 - Historical Materialism 22 (2):237-256.
    Malcolm Quinn’s book,Utilitarianism and the Art School in Nineteenth-Century Britain, is an historical study of the birth pangs of the state-funded art school that interrogates the politics of art’s reproduction within the context of Victorian reformism in which the art school was proposed as a mechanism to improve the standards of taste of manufacturers and factory workers, as well as of artists, designers, art teachers and others. The review locates the political and cultural transition from the academy to (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  49.  12
    Robert Owen’s influence on French republicanism in the first half of the nineteenth century: the role of former Saint-Simonians and their networks (Pierre Leroux, Jean Reynaud, and George Sand).Quentin Schwanck - 2021 - History of European Ideas 47 (2):299-314.
    ABSTRACT Robert Owen’s ideas and achievements largely shaped French republicanism in the 1830s and 1840s, particularly through the action of former Saint-Simonian socialists. This article explores this process, focusing on two of its major actors: the philosophers Pierre Leroux and Jean Reynaud, who joined the Republican Party in 1833. The two friends formulated an ambitious and influential republican doctrine in their Encyclopédie Nouvelle, in which Owen’s philosophy was largely mobilised, most particularly when Leroux theorised his religion de la fraternité on (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  50.  40
    Thinking of a Utopian Future: Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century Spain.Juan Pro - 2015 - Utopian Studies 26 (2):329-348.
    Charles Fourier propounded a socialist and, at the same time, libertarian utopia: a harmonious project of living together in solidarity, of cooperative work and sexual freedom. Historians interested in its reception in Spain have underlined the lack of thinkers capable of developing Fourier’s thinking along original lines or from a certain theoretical level. Moreover, it has been affirmed that Fourier’s original doctrine was impoverished in Spain because it was stripped of a large part of its utopian aspects and reduced to (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
1 — 50 / 971