Results 101 to 110 of about 42,526 (245)
From Everyman to Hamlet: A Distant Reading
Abstract The sixteenth century sees English drama move from Everyman to Hamlet: from religious to secular subject matter and from personified abstractions to characters bearing proper names. Most modern scholarship has explained this transformation in terms originating in the work of Jacob Burckhardt: concern with religion and a taste for ...
Vladimir Brljak
wiley +1 more source
Gardens in the Air: A Reexamination of the Ottoman Tulip Age
Scholars have long considered the “Tulip Age” to be a sort of Ottoman renaissance—a golden age initiated by the 1718 Treaty of Passarowitz and lasted until the Anti-Tulip Rebellion in 1730.
Fry, Rachel R.
core
Karl Polanyi and Oszkar Jászi: Liberal socialism, the aster revolution and the Tanácsköztársaság [PDF]
For the abstract, please see the attached ...
Dale, G
core
Abstract This article examines how late bardic poetry transforms the condition of exile into a literary mode that reimagines community and tradition. I argue that poetry of lament, blessing and devotion articulates a broader literary consciousness that anticipates modern notions of a national consciousness. The compilation of bardic verse in manuscript
Daniel T. McClurkin
wiley +1 more source
Truth Tables, True Distinctions. Paradoxes of the Source Code of Science. [PDF]
Roth S.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT This article examines the Turkish state's Village Guard system, revived in the 1980s as part of its counterinsurgency strategy against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). While often framed as a defensive militia, the Village Guards became central to the state's exceptional governance in Kurdistan, both facilitating military control and ...
Francis O'Connor +3 more
wiley +1 more source
The Impact of COVID-19 on Continuing Professional Development: Go Green and Go Home? [PDF]
Windrim RC, Gan E, Kingdom JC.
europepmc +1 more source
Perceptional Welfare Boundary for Migrant Families in China: What, Where and How?
ABSTRACT Despite recent reforms to China's hukou system, internal migrants in urban centres continue to face significant barriers in accessing welfare benefits and public services. This study introduces the concept of the perceptional welfare boundary to explain how welfare exclusion persists beyond formal institutional constraints.
Qiaobing Wu, Shirley Yang
wiley +1 more source
COVID-19 and organized crime: an introduction to the special issue. [PDF]
Kotzé J, Lloyd A, Antonopoulos GA.
europepmc +1 more source

