Academic literature on the topic '1880s'

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Journal articles on the topic "1880s"

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Joseph, John E. "Language Pedagogy and Political-Cognitive Autonomy in Mid-19th Century Geneva." Historiographia Linguistica 39, no. 2-3 (November 23, 2012): 259–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hl.39.2-3.04jos.

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Summary Charles-Louis Longchamp (1802–1874) was the dominant figure in Latin studies in Geneva in the 1850s and 1860s and had a formative influence on the Latin teachers of Ferdinand de Saussure (1857–1913). Longchamp’s work was in the grammaire générale tradition, which, on account of historical anomalies falling out from the Genevese Revolution of 1846 to 1848, was still being taught in Geneva up to the mid-1870s, despite having been put aside in France in the 1830s and 1840s. Longchamp succeeded briefly in getting his Latin grammars onto the school curriculum, replacing those imported from France, which Longchamp argued were making the Genevese mentally indistinguishable from the French, weakening their power to think for themselves and putting their political independence at risk. His own grammars offered “a sort of bulwark against invasion by the foreign mind, a guarantee against annexation”. Longchamp’s pedagogical approach had echoes in Saussure’s teaching of Germanic languages in Paris in the 1880s, and in the ‘stylistics’ of Saussure’s successor Charles Bally (1865–1947).
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Campen, James T., and Anne Mayhew. "The National Banking System and Southern Economic Growth: Evidence from One Southern City, 1870–1900." Journal of Economic History 48, no. 1 (March 1988): 127–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700004186.

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Evidence from banks in one southern city casts doubt upon the view that the quasi-monopolistic structure of the national banking system financed American industrialization by depriving southern and western regions of relatively inexpensive money. An increased number of national banks were lending much more locally in the 1880s and 1890s in Knoxville, Tennessee, than they were in the 1860s and 1870s. The national banking expansion and associated expansion in the number of state-chartered banks appear to have resulted from a local boom rather than from removal of barriers to entry.
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Colman, Patty R. "John Ballard and the African American Community in Los Angeles, 1850–1905." Southern California Quarterly 94, no. 2 (2012): 193–229. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/scq.2012.94.2.193.

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John Ballard, an African American pioneer from Kentucky, became a leader of Los Angeles's black community, 1850s–1870s. His story illustrates the early opportunities for black Angelenos in institution-formation, political activism, property ownership, and economic success. However, with the railroad booms of the 1870s and 1880s, Ballard and other prominent black citizens suffered a loss of social and economic status. Ballard ended up homesteading in the Santa Monica Mountains.
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Skaggs, Neil T. "The Methodological Roots of J. Laurence Laughlin's Anti-quantity Theory of Money and Prices." Journal of the History of Economic Thought 17, no. 1 (1995): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1053837200002261.

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From the 1880s until after the creation of the Federal Reserve System in 1913 the United States was a hotbed of monetary controversy. The secular price deflation that began in 1865 prompted a host of efforts to increase the money supply, in the belief that more money would check the decline of prices. The agitation for free coinage of silver that arose in the 1870s and carried into the 1880s and 1890s generated a maelstrom of arguments and counterarguments. Such theoretical support as the “cheap money advocates” provided was in the form of a crude application of the quantity theory of money. Not surprisingly, using the quantity theory in such a manner brought the theory itself under fire.
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Teslya, Andrey. "The Place of Slavophilism in the Typology of Conservatism." Stasis 10, no. 2 (January 20, 2021): 13–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.33280/2310-3817-21-10-2-13-40.

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In the history of political thought, Russian Slavophilism of the period from 1840s till 1880s has two established traditions of interpretation: as a variant of conservative ideology and as one form of Russian liberalism of the 1840s, along with Westernism (in this case, the later history of Slavophilism, i.e. the period between 1860s and 1880s, is viewed as a departure from initially liberal stances. Beginning with the framework of Andrzej Walicki, the article attempts to demonstrate the underpinnings of this peculiar duality of evaluations. Slavophilism is understood as liberal conservatism; the article also uncovers the structural conditions, on which the liberal component of Slavophile views are based. Special attention is given to the analysis of processes, which led to the dominance of the interpretation, according to which Russian Slavophilism is a conservative ideology, where the liberal component is defined as situational. The reason for such a reading are rooted in the peculiar position of Russian liberalism in the late XIX century, when the nationalism agenda was interpreted as entirely pertaining to the conservative side of the political spectrum.
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Teslya, Andrey. "The Place of Slavophilism in the Typology of Conservatism." Stasis 10, no. 2 (January 20, 2021): 13–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.33280/2310-3817-2020-10-2-13-40.

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In the history of political thought, Russian Slavophilism of the period from 1840s till 1880s has two established traditions of interpretation: as a variant of conservative ideology and as one form of Russian liberalism of the 1840s, along with Westernism (in this case, the later history of Slavophilism, i.e. the period between 1860s and 1880s, is viewed as a departure from initially liberal stances. Beginning with the framework of Andrzej Walicki, the article attempts to demonstrate the underpinnings of this peculiar duality of evaluations. Slavophilism is understood as liberal conservatism; the article also uncovers the structural conditions, on which the liberal component of Slavophile views are based. Special attention is given to the analysis of processes, which led to the dominance of the interpretation, according to which Russian Slavophilism is a conservative ideology, where the liberal component is defined as situational. The reason for such a reading are rooted in the peculiar position of Russian liberalism in the late XIX century, when the nationalism agenda was interpreted as entirely pertaining to the conservative side of the political spectrum.
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Duggan, Christopher. "Francesco Crispi's relationship with Britain: from admiration to disillusionment." Modern Italy 16, no. 4 (November 2011): 427–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13532944.2011.611226.

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This article examines the changing attitude of the Sicilian statesman Francesco Crispi towards Britain between the 1850s and the end of the century. While Crispi had enormous admiration for Britain, and recognised that Italy had much to learn from its political system, he also acknowledged that the British constitution was the product of a long process of historical evolution and could never be imitated slavishly in Italy. From the end of the 1870s in particular, Crispi felt that Italy could not concede the degree of freedom permitted in Britain until the state had completed its work of what he called ‘political education’. As prime minister in the 1880s and 1890s Crispi looked to an aggressive foreign policy to strengthen Italy's beleaguered institutions, and he counted on British support to achieve this. The refusal of Britain to back him in the way he hoped left him perplexed and ultimately disillusioned about what he had felt was a special friendship between the two countries.
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Strong, Rowan. "Anglican Emigrant Chaplaincy in the British Empire and Beyond,c.1840–1900." Studies in Church History 54 (May 14, 2018): 314–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/stc.2017.17.

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In the 1840s the Church of England, through the agency of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG) and the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK), established an official chaplaincy to emigrants leaving from British ports. The chaplaincy lasted throughout the rest of the nineteenth century. It was revitalized in the 1880s under the direction of the SPCK in response to a surge in emigration from Britain to the colonies. This article examines the imperial attitudes of Anglicans involved in this chaplaincy network, focusing on those of the 1880s and 1890s, the period of high imperialism in Britain. It compares these late nineteenth-century outlooks with those of Anglicans in the emigrant chaplaincy of the 1840s, in order to discern changes and continuities in Anglican imperialism in nineteenth-century Britain. It finds that, in contrast to the imperialist attitudes prevalent in Britain during the late nineteenth century, Anglicans in this chaplaincy network focused more on the ecclesiastical and pastoral dimensions of their work. Indeed, pro-imperial attitudes, though present, were remarkably scarce. It was the Church much more than the empire which mattered to these Anglicans, notwithstanding their direct involvement with the British empire.
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Сапожков, С. В. "Poetry of the 1880s–1890s through the Prism of the Narodnik and Symbolist Criticism." Вестник Рязанского государственного университета имени С.А. Есенина, no. 2(67) (July 23, 2020): 91–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.37724/rsu.2020.67.2.010.

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В статье предпринята попытка сопоставить критерии, которые господствовали в оценках поэзии двух последних десятилетий XIX века в критике народнического направления и раннесимволистской критике 1890-х годов, и на основе оценки этих заведомо амбивалентных суждений определить суть «переходной» модальности поэзии 1880–1890-х годов, осуществлявшей в это кризисное время движение от классики к модернизму. Материалом сопоставления послужили критические выступления С. Я. Надсона и П. Ф. Якубовича, с одной стороны, и В. Я. Брюсова — с другой. Автор статьи показывает, как одни и те же особенности содержания и стиля поэтов конца XIX века получали диаметрально противоположное истолкование представителями этих течений критики, наполняя различным смыслом оппозицию «классика — модернизм». На основе этих суждений автор статьи намечает критерии «переходности» метода и стиля поэзии 1880–1890-х годов. The article attempts to juxtapose the criteria which prevailed in critical assessments of poetry of the two final decades of the 19th century in the Narodnik criticism and the Symbolist criticism of the 1890s and, relying in theses assessments, to define the principle of the transitional modality of poetry of the 1880s-1890s, which signified a transition from classics to modernism. The article analyzes V. Ya. Bryusovʼs critical works and critical works written by S. Ya. Nadson and P. F. Yakubovich. The author of the article shows that the representatives of classical criticism and modernist criticism treated 19th-century poetsʼ literary style from different perspectives. Relying on these conclusions, the author of the article suggests some criteria for assessing the transitional method and style of poetry of the 1880s–1890s.
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Kolomoiet, Olena, and Yurii Kolomoiet. "The evolution of the relations between Mykhailo Drahomanov and Russian revolutionary emigration in Switzerland in the late 1870s – early 1880s." Scientific Papers of the Kamianets-Podilskyi National Ivan Ohiienko University. History 34 (December 29, 2021): 209–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.32626/2309-2254.2021-34.209-220.

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The purpose of the study is to shed light on the evolution of M. Drahomanov’s relations with the Russian revolutionaries in the late 1870s and early 1880s. The research methodology is based on the principles of historicism and objectivity. A number of methods are involved: general scientifi c methods of analysis and synthesis, as well as special-historical methods: problem-chronological, comparative-historical, retrospective. The scientifi c novelty lies in the fact that unexplored aspects of M. Drahomanov’s relations with the representatives of the Russian revolutionary movement in exile in the late 1870s and early 1880s are shown. The views of such figures as V. Zasulych, L. Deich, J. Stefanovych, the testimony of the gendarmerie units on the role of M. Drahomanov in emigrant circles in Switzerland are presented. Conclusions. During the second half of the 1870s and early 1880s, the relations between M. Drahomanov and the Russian revolutionary emigration went from being absolutely friendly to openly hostile and ignoring. Having arrived in Switzerland, the famous scientist and public fi gure gathered emigrants around him. They were attracted by his principled and moderate views. However, in the times of crisis for the revolutionary movement of 1880–1881, M. Drahomanov became an undesirable fi gure for the emigrant revolutionaries. Many of them publicly showed reluctance to keep in touch with Drahomanov and even talk about him. The reason for this, in our opinion, is the peculiarities of the emigrant environment, which aff ected the psychology, way of thinking, and even actions of exiled revolutionaries, provoking radicalization of views, intolerance of other people’s opinions, the search for hidden traitors, and enemies of the revolutionary cause. Th e change in their attitude was due to the fact that M. Drahomanov did not share the idea of revolutionary terror, and for some time collaborated with the newspaper “Volnoe Slovo” (“Free Word”).
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "1880s"

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Wang, Hsien-chun. "Transferring western technology into China, 1840s-1880s." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.530085.

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Skelding, Hilary. "Girls' literature of the 1880s and 1890s : new developments in women's writing." Thesis, Keele University, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.339843.

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Dent, Shirley. "Iniquitous symmetries : aestheticism and secularism in the reception of William Blake's works in books and periodicals during the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2000. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/2904/.

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This thesis examines Blake's posthumous reception, focusing particularly on the 1860s, 1870s and 1880s as decades in which Blake's reputation was both consolidated as a poet and artist, and invigorated as a radical sympathizer. As Blake's texts and life were being formed and re-formed in physically and conceptually elaborate books, such as Alexander Gilchrist's The Life of William Blake and Algernon Charles Swinburne's William Blake: a critical essay, significant and innovative appropriations of Blake's poetry and illustrations were made in Republican and freethinking periodicals and pamphlets. This thesis recovers some of that material. Retrieving the influence of such "low culture" ephemera on the "high" culture of Pre-Raphaelite creativity allows the Victorian Blake to emerge as a multi-faceted, contradictory production: both secular iconoclast and mystical visionary, blasphemous sibyl and poet of social justice. Nineteenth-century readings and reproductions of Blake are a chronicle of freethought and freeform. The multiplicity of Blake in this period, in both reproduction and interpretation, enables a questioning of books and periodicals as mediums of representation. Blake's reproduction in the nineteenth century coincides with, and yet confounds, Foucauldian configurations of nineteenth-century representation. Although Blake is depicted as a lone, isolated individual - often labouring under the insane tag - this does not simply signify an epistemological nadir of vacuous, disconnected individualism, such as Foucault identifies. On the contrary, this thesis seeks to prove that the enthusiasm for Blake in the 1860s, 1870s and 1880s is facilitated by a deep connectivity of medium and message, and between different mediums and different messages. The political stance of Secularism meets the cultural concerns of Aestheticism, both reproducing Blake through technology that improvises upon and rejuvenates Blake's own unique craft.
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Abe, Kaori. "The city of intermediaries : Compradors in Hong Kong from the 1830s to the 1880s." Thesis, University of Bristol, 2014. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.665457.

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The compradors (maiban), who were intermediary elites, played key roles in the formulation of the fundamental social system of the Hong Kong, the system of intermediation, from the 1830s to the 1880s. This system depends on the existence of coordinators mediating between the commercial and political interests of a variety of people and groups; the integration of human, financial, and information resources; and the intermediary elites' participation in public issues. My PhD research explores Chinese compradors serving foreign institutions in Hong Kong in the nineteenth century. It describes the evolution of the comprador system in nineteenth century Hong Kong, with specific focus on individuals working in the colonial government and with foreign companies. The First Opium War dismantled and privatised the licensed comprador system between the late 1830s and the early 1840s. Thereafter, a variety of compradors appeared in Hong Kong, including government compradors, ship compradors, and company compradors. Of these, the company compradors, who acted as internal staff of the foreign firms as well as their external business, achieved notable economic and political success during the 1870s and 1880s. Collaborating with various individuals, institutions, and communities, the company compradors consolidated their social status in the commercial and political world of Hong Kong by the late 1880s. The Hong Kong compradors' socio-economic activities eventually produced the social system of intermediation in late nineteenth century Hong Kong. After the return of Hong Kong to China in 1997, the city continues to be a commercial centre of East Asia, and to intermediate foreign and Chinese economies, politics, and culture. This thesis will promote further understanding of the contemporary society and people of Hong Kong.
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Lee, Sai-chong Jack. "China trade painting : 1750s to 1880s /." View the Table of Contents & Abstract, 2005. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B35879476.

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Lee, Sai-chong Jack, and 李世莊. "China trade painting: 1750s to 1880s." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2005. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B45015442.

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Cho, Mijin. "British Quaker women and peace, 1880s to 1920s." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2010. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/1072/.

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This thesis explores the lives of four British Quaker women—Isabella Ford, Isabel Fry, Margery Fry, and Ruth Fry—focusing on the way they engaged in peace issues in the early twentieth century. In order to examine the complexity and diversity of their experiences, this thesis investigates the characteristics of their Quakerism, pacifism and wider political and personal life, as well as the connections between them. In contrast to O’Donnell’s view that most radical Victorian Quaker women left Quakerism to follow their political pursuits with like-minded friends outside of Quakerism, Isabella Ford, one of the most radical socialists, and feminists among Quakers remained as a Quaker. British Quakers were divided on peace issues but those who disagreed with the general Quaker approach resigned and were not disowned; the case of Isabel Fry is a good example of this. This thesis argues that the experiences of four Quaker women highlight the permissive approach Quakerism afforded its participants in the early twentieth century, challenging previous interpretations of Quakerism as a mono-culture. Highlighting the swift change within Quakerism from being the closed group of the nineteenth to a more open group in the twentieth century, this thesis describes the varied and varying levels of commitment these women had to the group as ‘elastic Quakerism’.
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Tympas, Aristotelis. "The computor and the analyst : computing and power, 1880s-1960s." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/27969.

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Owen, James Robert. "The 'Caucus' and party organisation in England in the 1880s." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.613673.

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Montaño, García Diana Jeaneth. "Electrifying Mexico: Cultural Responses to a New Technology, 1880s-1960s." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/560857.

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Electricity played a central role in imagining and crafting Mexico's path to modernity from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. Since the late 19th century, Mexican officials pursued the goals of order and progress, enrolling science and technology to help rationalize and modernize the nation, its economy, and society. The electrification of the country's capital was seen as a crucial step in bringing it to the level of modern European and American cities. Electricity as a primary engine of modern society permeated all aspects of life traversing histories of the city, transportation, labor, business, engineering, women, agriculture, medicine, death, public celebrations, nightlife, advertising, literature, architecture, to name a few. Taking technology as an extension of human lives, I argue that in their everyday life, in public and private spaces, government officials, technocrats, lawyers, doctors, business owners, housewives and ordinary citizens both sold and consumed electricity. They did so by crafting a discourse for an electrified future; and by shaping how the new technology was to be used. I examine newspapers, cookbooks, novels, women's magazines, traveler's accounts, memoirs, poems, songs, court, government and company records to show how by debating, embracing, rejecting, appropriating and transforming this technology, Mexicans actively shaped their country's quest for modernity.
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Books on the topic "1880s"

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Victoria, National Gallery of, ed. Fred Kruger: Intimate landscapes, photographs 1860s-1880s. Melbourne, Victoria: National Gallery of Victoria, 2012.

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Buerge, David M. Seattle in the 1880s. Edited by Grover Stuart R and Historical Society of Seattle and King County. [Seattle]: Historical Society of Seattle and King County, 1986.

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Katz, William Loren. The great migrations, 1880s-1912. Austin, Tex: Raintree Steck-Vaughn, 1993.

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Schaffer, Alan. Visions: Clemson's yesteryears, 1880s-1960s. Louisville, Ky: Harmony House, 1990.

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Johannesburg style: Architecture & society, 1880s-1960s. Cape Town: D. Philip Publishers, 1993.

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Horn, Pamela. Children's work and welfare, 1780-1880s. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan, 1994.

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Maureen, Anderson. Francis Frith's England in the 1880s. Salisbury, Wiltshire: Frith Book Co., 2001.

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Horn, Pamela. Children’s Work and Welfare, 1780–1880s. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13315-4.

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Laidlaw, Petra. The Jewish communities of Islington: 1730s-1880s. London: Islington Archaeology and History Society, 2013.

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Yu-Jose, Lydia N. Filipinos in Japan and Okinawa, 1880s-1972. [Tokyo]: Research Institute for the Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "1880s"

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Gentes, Andrew A. "The 1880s." In Russia's Sakhalin Penal Colony, 1849–1917, 181–216. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003161202-10.

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Hanson, Clare. "The 1880s and 1890s: Impressionists and Imperialists." In Short Stories and Short Fictions, 1880–1980, 10–33. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-17685-4_2.

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Scully, Richard. "Business as Usual: The 1880s and 1890s." In British Images of Germany, 62–71. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137283467_8.

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Delegard, Kirsten. "Women's Movements, 1880s-1920s." In A Companion to American Women's History, 328–47. Malden, MA, USA: Blackwell Publishing, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470998595.ch19.

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Spretnak, Charlene. "Mid-1880s to 1918." In The Spiritual Dynamic in Modern Art, 53–91. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137342577_3.

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Shattock, Joanne, Joanne Wilkes, Katherine Newey, and Valerie Sanders. "The 1880s and after." In Literary and Cultural Criticism from the Nineteenth Century, 191–243. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003199915-41.

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Trower, Shelley. "“Nerve-Vibration”: Therapeutic Technologies in the 1880s and 1890s." In Neurology and Modernity, 148–62. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230278004_8.

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"The 1880s and 1890s:." In George Frederick Bristow, 130–50. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/j.ctv180h77b.14.

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Preston, Katherine K. "The 1880s and 1890s." In George Frederick Bristow, 130–50. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043420.003.0011.

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New York grew dramatically in population and musical activity in the 1880s and 1890s. Bristow was still respected and admired but now as a venerable musician who was out-of-step with current developments (he was never a Wagnerian). His performing activity diminished; he resigned from the Philharmonic Society in 1882. He joined the New York Manuscript Society, suggesting continued support for American musicians. He resumed writing songs and character pieces for piano (including “Plantation Melodies,” perhaps in response to Antonin Dvořák). He revised Rip Van Winkle and wrote the overture Jibbenainosay (1886) as well as the Mass in C (1885) and his choral symphony, Niagara (1893).
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"The 1880s and 1890s." In Modern Japan, 69–85. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203446034-8.

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Conference papers on the topic "1880s"

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Popp, Ivan Aleksandrovich. "BASHKIR POPULATION AT TOWNSHIP COURT IN THE 1860S-1880S." In Историческая наука и историческое образование в условиях глобальных трансформаций. Екатеринбург: [б.и.], 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.54351/978-5-7186-1774-0_2021_25_43.

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Popp, Ivan Aleksandrovich. "BASHKIR POPULATION AT TOWNSHIP COURT IN THE 1860S-1880S." In Историческая наука и историческое образование в условиях глобальных трансформаций. Екатеринбург: [б.и.], 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26170/978-5-7186-1774-0_2021_25_43.

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Медведева, Т. В. "Франтишек Иезбера в кругу русских славистов." In Межкультурное и межъязыковое взаимодействие в пространстве Славии (к 110-летию со дня рождения С. Б. Бернштейна). Институт славяноведения РАН, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/0459-6.37.

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The article is devoted to the relations of the Czech philologist F. Iezbera in Russia in the 1860–1880s and it is based on archival materials. Among the correspondents of Iezbera were suchfigures as A. F. Gilferding, M. F. Rayevsky, V. V. Makushev, P. A. Lavrovsky, I. S. Aksakov. The correspondence discusses the history of Slavic languages, the attitude of the Czechs to Russia and the publication of the newspaper “Slovenin” in the 1860s.
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Rivai, Muhammad, Erond L. Damanik, Hafnita Sari Dewi Lubis, and Apriani Harahap. "Railway Transport Development in East Sumatra, 1880s-1930s." In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Innovation in Education, Science and Culture, ICIESC 2022, 11 October 2022, Medan, Indonesia. EAI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.11-10-2022.2325400.

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Yusifova, Arina. "Social Composition Of Patients At Staraya Russa Resort In The 1870-1880s." In International Scientific and Practical Conference «MAN. SOCIETY. COMMUNICATION». European Publisher, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2021.05.02.125.

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Ganin, Alexandr. "N.Y. GROT ON THE SITUATION IN RUSSIAN PHILOSOPHY IN THE LATE 1880S." In 6th SWS International Scientific Conference on Arts and Humanities ISCAH 2019. STEF92 Technology, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sws.iscah.2019.1/s09.018.

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Khropov, A. "EARLY STAGES OF TOPOGRAPHIC STUDIES OF THE TERRITORIES OF CRIMEA AND THE BLACK SEA COAST OF THE CAUCASUS (COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS)." In Man and Nature: Priorities of Modern Research in the Area of Interaction of Nature and Society. LCC MAKS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m2610.s-n_history_2021_44/240-247.

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Proper topographic study of Crimea started not earlier than in the late 18th century when, after the incorporation of the peninsula into the Russian Empire, first rather detailed maps of this area were compiled by both military and civil agencies. Crucial breakthrough in topographic knowledge on Crimea occured from 1886 to 1911 as a result of its 1:21 000 survey representing relief features with contours. In comparison with other northern Black Sea regions, topographic studies of today’s Krasnodar Krai coastal areas started significantly later. The first review topographic maps of the area were compiled in the 1830s, but their quality remained unsatisfactory for a long time because of survey difficulties in the mountains and under conditions of the Caucasian War 1817–1864. «Map of the Caucasus with adjacent parts of Turkey and Persia» on 58 sheets at a scale of 1:210 000 definitely belongs to distinguished fundamental cartographical works of the 19th–20th centuries. Its compilation began in 1866 and continued over several decades. Its revised sheets continue to be issued up to 1941. In the Caucasus, the period of instrumental surveys representing relief features with contours started in the 1880s. These surveys were performed at a scale of 1:42 000.
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Чернов, О. А. "PROBLEMS OF INTEGRATION OF CENTRAL ASIA IN THE PRACTICE OF RUSSIAN IMPERIAL DIPLOMACY (1880s)." In Конференция памяти профессора С.Б. Семёнова ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ ЗАРУБЕЖНОЙ ИСТОРИИ. Crossref, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.55000/mcu.2021.88.32.028.

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В статье рассматривается проблемы интеграции Средней Азии в практике российской им-перской дипломатии. The article deals with the problems of integration of Central Asia in the practice of Russian impe-rial diplomacy.
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Dyachkov, V. "MIGRATION OF RUSSIAN POPULATION FROM 1880s TO 1940s: CONDITIONS, METHODOLOGY AND TECHNIQUE OF INVESTIGATION." In Man and Nature: Priorities of Modern Research in the Area of Interaction of Nature and Society. LCC MAKS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m2592.s-n_history_2021_44/106-114.

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The article states the methodological and research technique conditions for the historical disclosure of the socio-natural synergy of social history in the specific case of Russian population migrations in the more than eventful period from the reign of Alexander III to the Great Patriotic War and the first post-war years, inclusive. The requirements for a modern researcher of social processes on long continuous series of complex sociographic and demographic information are formulated. The public and author's mass sources are named, which are necessary for identifying and comparing the synergisms of migrations at five levels of populations of individual settlements, a subregion, a region, a macro-region and the country as a whole, and an algorithm for their processing is shown. Some of the most important results of the study of migration as a complex socio-natural mechanism of regulation and control of populations are presented in graphs, diagrams, histograms and maps.
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Kirilina, Liubov. "The Women's Issue in Slovenian Journalism (1870s - mid-1890s)." In Woman in the heart of Europe: non-obvious aspects of gender in the history and culture of Central Europe and adjacent regions. Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/0475-6.11.

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Reports on the topic "1880s"

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Card, David, and Craig Olson. Bargaining Power, Strike Duration, and Wage Outcomes: An Analysis of Strikes in the 1880s. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, May 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w4075.

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Yaro, Joseph, Joseph K. Teye, and Steve Wiggins. Land and Labour Relations on Cocoa Farms in Sefwi, Ghana: Continuity and Change. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), November 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/apra.2021.033.

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When in the 1880s farmers in southern Ghana began to plant cocoa, their main concerns were finding land to plant and mobilising labour to do so. The issue of finding land remained paramount until at least the 1990s, when the land frontier of forest to clear for cocoa finally closed. The last forests to be planted were in the old Western Region and particularly in Sefwi, now the Western North Region. This paper examines how farmers in Sefwi obtained land and mobilised labour in the late 2010s, and how that has changed since the 1960s.
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Murray, Chris, Keith Williams, Norrie Millar, Monty Nero, Amy O'Brien, and Damon Herd. A New Palingenesis. University of Dundee, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.20933/100001273.

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Robert Duncan Milne (1844-99), from Cupar, Fife, was a pioneering author of science fiction stories, most of which appeared in San Francisco’s Argonaut magazine in the 1880s and ’90s. SF historian Sam Moskowitz credits Milne with being the first full-time SF writer, and his contribution to the genre is arguably greater than anyone else including Stevenson and Conan Doyle, yet it has all but disappeared into oblivion. Milne was fascinated by science. He drew on the work of Scottish physicists and inventors such as James Clark Maxwell and Alexander Graham Bell into the possibilities of electromagnetic forces and new communications media to overcome distances in space and time. Milne wrote about visual time-travelling long before H.G. Wells. He foresaw virtual ‘tele-presencing’, remote surveillance, mobile phones and worldwide satellite communications – not to mention climate change, scientific terrorism and drone warfare, cryogenics and molecular reengineering. Milne also wrote on alien life forms, artificial immortality, identity theft and personality exchange, lost worlds and the rediscovery of extinct species. ‘A New Palingenesis’, originally published in The Argonaut on July 7th 1883, and adapted in this comic, is a secular version of the resurrection myth. Mary Shelley was the first scientiser of the occult to rework the supernatural idea of reanimating the dead through the mysterious powers of electricity in Frankenstein (1818). In Milne’s story, in which Doctor S- dissolves his terminally ill wife’s body in order to bring her back to life in restored health, is a striking, further modernisation of Frankenstein, to reflect late-nineteenth century interest in electromagnetic science and spiritualism. In particular, it is a retelling of Shelley’s narrative strand about Frankenstein’s aborted attempt to shape a female mate for his creature, but also his misogynistic ambition to bypass the sexual principle in reproducing life altogether. By doing so, Milne interfused Shelley’s updating of the Promethean myth with others. ‘A New Palingenesis’ is also a version of Pygmalion and his male-ordered, wish-fulfilling desire to animate his idealised female sculpture, Galatea from Ovid’s Metamorphoses, perhaps giving a positive twist to Orpheus’s attempt to bring his corpse-bride Eurydice back from the underworld as well? With its basis in spiritualist ideas about the soul as a kind of electrical intelligence, detachable from the body but a material entity nonetheless, Doctor S- treats his wife as an ‘intelligent battery’. He is thus able to preserve her personality after death and renew her body simultaneously because that captured electrical intelligence also carries a DNA-like code for rebuilding the individual organism itself from its chemical constituents. The descriptions of the experiment and the body’s gradual re-materialisation are among Milne’s most visually impressive, anticipating the X-raylike anatomisation and reversal of Griffin’s disappearance process in Wells’s The Invisible Man (1897). In the context of the 1880s, it must have been a compelling scientisation of the paranormal, combining highly technical descriptions of the Doctor’s system of electrically linked glass coffins with ghostly imagery. It is both dramatic and highly visual, even cinematic in its descriptions, and is here brought to life in the form of a comic.
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Dupont, Brandon, and Joshua Rosenbloom. Wealth Mobility in the 1860s. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w27968.

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Last Name, First Name. Technical Report Testing 1880. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1429248.

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Rockoff, Hugh. The Capital Market in the 1850s. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, December 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/h0011.

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Яшин, Вадим Олександрович. Влада і суспільство у боротьбі з антиєврейськими погромами початку 1880-х рр. у південноукраїнських землях. Харківський національний педагогічний університет імені Г. С. Сковороди, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/4181.

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Collins, William, and Marianne Wanamaker. African American Intergenerational Economic Mobility Since 1880. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, May 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w23395.

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Meissner, Christopher, and John Tang. Upstart Industrialization and Exports, Japan 1880-1910. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, June 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w23481.

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Atack, Jeremy, and Fred Bateman. How Long Was the Workday in 1880? Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, August 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/h0015.

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