Literatura académica sobre el tema "Women Printers in Lyon"
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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Women Printers in Lyon"
Amundsen Bergström, Matilda. "Peritextuella gränsland". Tidskrift för litteraturvetenskap 45, n.º 2-3 (1 de enero de 2015): 5–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.54797/tfl.v45i2-3.8968.
Texto completoJones, Ann Rosalind. "Contentious Readings: Urban Humanism and Gender Difference in La Puce de Madame Des-Roches (1582)*". Renaissance Quarterly 48, n.º 1 (1995): 109–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2863323.
Texto completoSMITH, NICK. "HILDA LYON: AERONAUTICAL PIONEER". Engineer 300, n.º 7913 (enero de 2020): 50–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/s0013-7758(22)90057-1.
Texto completoParker, Deborah. "Women in the Book Trade in Italy, 1475-1620*". Renaissance Quarterly 49, n.º 3 (1996): 509–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2863365.
Texto completoTrites, Roberta Seelinger. "The Afterlife of Little Women by Beverly Lyon Clark". Children's Literature Association Quarterly 40, n.º 4 (2015): 406–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/chq.2015.0045.
Texto completoDoyle, Christine. "The Afterlife of Little Women by Beverly Lyon Clark". Studies in the Novel 47, n.º 2 (2015): 267–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/sdn.2015.0017.
Texto completoMyerson, Joel. "The Afterlife of Little Women by Beverly Lyon Clark". Lion and the Unicorn 39, n.º 1 (2015): 116–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/uni.2015.0003.
Texto completoHafter, Daryl M. "Women in the Underground Business of Eighteenth-Century Lyon". Enterprise & Society 2, n.º 1 (marzo de 2001): 11–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/es/2.1.11.
Texto completoGubar, Marah. "The Afterlife of Little Women by Beverly Lyon Clark". Children's Literature 44, n.º 1 (2016): 244–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/chl.2016.0007.
Texto completoSaadatian-Elahi, M., Y. Mekki, C. Del Signore, B. Lina, T. Derrough, E. Caulin, J. Thierry y P. Vanhems. "Seroprevalence of varicella antibodies among pregnant women in Lyon-France". European Journal of Epidemiology 22, n.º 6 (30 de mayo de 2007): 405–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10654-007-9136-z.
Texto completoTesis sobre el tema "Women Printers in Lyon"
King, Martha Joanne. "Making an impression: Women printers in the Southern colonies in the Revolutionary Era". W&M ScholarWorks, 1992. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539720299.
Texto completoRajchenbach, Élise. ""Mais devant tous est le Lyon marchant" : Construction littéraire d'un milieu éditorial et livres de poésie française à Lyon (1536-1551)". Thesis, Paris 3, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA030072.
Texto completoFrom the late 1530s to the early 1550s, the city of Lyons sees a considerable enterprise of promotion of poetry books, supported by a group of printers and booksellers. From the printer’s and bookseller’s workshops to the space of the book, this undertaking is built upon the reinvention of French as a refined language fit for conveying literature and poetry. Étienne Dolet, François Juste, Jean de Tournes and Guillaume Rouillé pursue a concerted editorial policy to obtain recognition for poetry books and the French language. During this period, Lyons builds a unique editorial identity, which sets the city apart from the rest of the kingdom. Even when the printers of Lyons help themselves to books edited in Paris, they do so by integrating the publications to consistent catalogues and using these to support their claim of a cultural and poetic identity specific to Lyons. This identity, along with a high editorial quality, sets up the pre- eminence of Lyons in Southern France, as can be witnessed for instance in Toulouse. All of these factors contribute to the setting up of a poetic field, but this pretense of consistency and unity is frail. If such a thing as “Lyons poetry” truly exists, this is only true insofar as poetry book holds the city’s political ambitions, in the context first of the war against Charles the Fifth and later of the change of reign
Davies, Glyn Selwyn Owain. "Understanding and explaining the trafficking of women from Albania to Lyon, France 1998-2001". Thesis, University of Sussex, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.437222.
Texto completoAndré, Marc. "Des Algériennes à Lyon. 1947-1974". Thesis, Paris 4, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA040033.
Texto completoThis thesis focuses on Algerian women who arrived in Lyon and surrounding areas before 1962. It presents a historical analysis which cross-compares their point of view and that of the metropolitan French, with regard to their interactions. It first examines the context in which these women arrived: the growth of Algerian nationalism and the Algerian War in metropolitan France. On the one hand, it analyses the discourses and social practices of journalists, photograph reporters, authorities, experts in demographics, judges. These discourses and social practices bear witness to the colonial era’s legacy in terms of prejudice and to the way in which this prejudice subjected Algerian women to effacement – the process in which a group of people within a society become less visible because they do not match the characteristics that are expected from them. On the other hand, through their social habits and defence strategies, these women showed their consciousness of the stereotypes affecting them: they subjected themselves to effacement and used it strategically as a camouflage. During the Algerian War, as it took shape in metropolitan France, effacement facilitated their mobilization in the two opposing parties: both FLN and MNA integrated women in their clandestine networks. This research analyses all the aspects of their involvement in the struggle: clandestine actions, repression prison, violence, mourning, flight, etc. Beyond the war as an event, this thesis moves on to resituate Algerian women in their migratory dynamics and their process of settling in, in metropolitan France, up to 1962. The study of their education, socio-professional insertion, and marriages highlights the diversity of Algerian women living in Lyon and surrounding areas. Although they benefited from welfare, they were far from being idle, and created networks that defined their own urban territories. More generally speaking, Algerian women formed a discreet diaspora. Based on a study of the press and on interviews and previously unpublished sources, this thesis highlights the evolution of a media discourse on Algerian women and cross-compares it with a sociological data base. This allows us to lay the foundations of an original form of social integration after 1962 which is community-based but not communitarian as made visible by the evolution of the association Amicale des Femmes Algériennes. It is the result of a series of cultural and political resistances in relation to which and with which Algerian women constructed their identity in metropolitan France
Roman, Dianne L. Ms. "Women at the Crossroads, Women at the Forefront, American Women in Letterpress Printing In the Nineteenth Century". VCU Scholars Compass, 2016. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/4595.
Texto completoRowan, Victoria Joanne. "La citoyenne bien renseignée : women, the newspaper press and urban literary culture in Paris, Rennes and Lyon 1780-1800". Thesis, University of Warwick, 1999. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/37080/.
Texto completoDougherty, Joy. "The construction of gender relations and sexuality in the printing labour process". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 1995.
Buscar texto completoSalle, Muriel. "L’avers d’une Belle Époque : genre et altérité dans les pratiques et les discours d’Alexandre Lacassagne (1843-1924), médecin lyonnais". Thesis, Lyon 2, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009LYO20050/document.
Texto completoThe following pages will retrace the personal and professional path of the Lyonnais doctor Alexandre Lacassagne (1843-1924), an intellectual from the end of the 19th century who founded anthropological criminology and the school of criminology that would go down in history known as the “école lyonnaise”. Having done his studies at a military school he belonged to that generation of men and Republicans who had been forged by the fires of the Franco-Prussian war, the fall of the Empire and the beginnings of colonial and Republican adventures. The reconstitution of his professional networks and the study of his intellectual positions show that he was an emblematic scholar of his time. His library reveals his true feelings : the analysis of the works shows an ongoing anguish, that of alterity. Of course of criminals, but also of women, of the insane, homosexuals and the “primitive” whose troubling figures contrast with the image of the carefree and unconditional faith in Progress that was quintessential of the “Belle Epoque”. Anthropology and anthropometry are at the service of a taxonomic frenzy that betrays the concern generated by all disinclination that had become intolerable. A process at the same time of essentialism and hierarchism are the foundations of a discourse justifying the ongoing exclusion of certain categories of populations rejected below the “Universel”. Lacassagne serves as a peephole to examine the “biopolitical” stakes of this exclusion. It is the obverse, the side of the coin showing the effigy- and that will be struck with the Other at the end of the century- and the portrait of a man and his time by the inventory of his aversions, which we wished to reconstruct
Huber, Karen E. "Sex and its consequences: abortion, infanticide, and women’s reproductive decision-making in France, 1901-1940". The Ohio State University, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1187032776.
Texto completoGrazia, Dalai Maria. "Le donne del libro. Il ruolo delle donne nella produzione e nel commercio del libro a Lione nel XVI secolo". Doctoral thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/11562/1029128.
Texto completoLibros sobre el tema "Women Printers in Lyon"
Rosalind, Hopkins, Maryatt Kitty, Scripps College Press y Press Collection (Library of Congress), eds. Los Angeles women letterpress printers. [Los Angeles]: Scripps College Press, 1987.
Buscar texto completoBellas, Patricia H. Women printers in early Maryland. Baltimore: Xavier Press, 1991.
Buscar texto completo1940-1989, Chatwin Bruce, ed. Lady, Lisa Lyon. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1991.
Buscar texto completoMapplethorpe, Robert. Lady, Lisa Lyon. Boston: Bulfinch Press/Little, Brown, 1996.
Buscar texto completoMujeres de la imprenta madrileña (ss. XVI-XVIII). [Madrid]: Turpin Editores, 2017.
Buscar texto completoMary, Lyon. Mary Lyon through her letters. Boston, Mass: Books Inc., 1987.
Buscar texto completo1966-, Hartley James E., ed. Mary Lyon, documents and writings. South Hadley, MA: Doorlight Publications, 2008.
Buscar texto completoStuart, Gloria. A slight diversion. Los Angeles: Imprenta Glorias, 2001.
Buscar texto completoSestini, Valentina. Donne tipografe a Messina tra XVII e XIX secolo. Pisa: Fabrizio Serra editore, 2015.
Buscar texto completoChung, Rebecca M. Making impressions: Women in printing and publishing. Editado por Moog Christine N. contributor, Nesler Miranda Garno contributor, Roman Dianne L. contributor, Hawley E. Haven contributor, Walkup Kathy contributor, Holmberg, Karen E., 1966- contributor, Maryatt Kitty contributor, Castro Varón Juliana contributor y Legacy Press. Ann Arbor, Michigan: The Legacy Press, 2020.
Buscar texto completoCapítulos de libros sobre el tema "Women Printers in Lyon"
Craig, Béatrice. "Printers and Manufacturers". En Women and Business Since 1500, 58–70. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-03324-6_6.
Texto completoFrisone, Anna. "Trade Union Feminism in Lyon:". En Women, Work, and Activism, 277–98. Central European University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7829/j.ctv280b7xs.18.
Texto completo"Mrs Angus Lyon 1762-1840". En An Anthology of Scottish Women Poets, 171. Edinburgh University Press, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781474469791-041.
Texto completoHulvey, Monique. "Sellers and Buyers of the Lyon Book Market in the Late 15th Century". En Printing R-Evolution and Society 1450-1500. Venice: Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-332-8/026.
Texto completo"Mobilizing the Little Women". En Little Women at 150, editado por Beverly Lyon Clark y Daniel Shealy, 89–113. University Press of Mississippi, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496837981.003.0005.
Texto completoFrisone, Anna. "Trade Union Feminism in Lyon: Commissions-femmes as Sites of Resistance and Well-being in the 1970s". En Women, Work, and Activism, 277–98. Central European University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789633864425-016.
Texto completoChenoweth, Katie. "The Corrector as Critic". En The Places of Early Modern Criticism, 38–52. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198834687.003.0003.
Texto completoda Costa, Alexandra. "For the Reader’s Digest". En Marketing English Books, 1476-1550, 203–37. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198847588.003.0007.
Texto completoBlake, Liza. "Early Modern Women in Print and Margaret Cavendish, Woman in Print". En The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern Women's Writing in English, 1540-1700, 611—C41.P22. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198860631.013.38.
Texto completoBrown, Hilary. "Fields of Translation". En Women and Early Modern Cultures of Translation, 100–135. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192844347.003.0004.
Texto completoInformes sobre el tema "Women Printers in Lyon"
Health Education Materials for the Workplace: Tools. Population Council, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/sbsr2017.1007.
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