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1

Abduraimova, Durdona Muhammadi kizi. « THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN HISTORICAL AND MODERN SOCIAL LIFE ». CURRENT RESEARCH JOURNAL OF HISTORY 03, no 02 (1 février 2022) : 44–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/history-crjh-03-02-08.

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This article discusses the historical roots of women's rights, religious views, the situation and problems of different periods, as well as the formation of modern approaches and today's reforms in this regard.
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Son Suk-Kyung. « The encounter of social history and life history ». 영남학 ll, no 15 (juin 2009) : 409–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.36034/yncdoi.2009..15.409.

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Abbott, Andrew. « Life Cycles in Social Science History ». Social Science History 23, no 4 (1999) : 481–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0145553200021830.

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When one is asked to speak on the past, present, and future of social science history, one is less overwhelmed by the size of the task than confused by its indexicality. Whose definition of social science history? Which past? Or, put another way, whose past? Indeed, which and whose present? Moreover, should the task be taken as one of description, prescription, or analysis? Many of us might agree on, say, a descriptive analysis of the past of the Social Science History Association. But about the past of social science history as a general rather than purely associational phenomenon, we might differ considerably. The problem of description versus prescription only increases this obscurity.
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Svensson, Erik, et Ben C. Sheldon. « The Social Context of Life History Evolution ». Oikos 83, no 3 (décembre 1998) : 466. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3546674.

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Lincoln, Yvonna, et Michael Lanford. « Life History’s Second Life ». Qualitative Inquiry 25, no 5 (14 décembre 2018) : 464–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077800418817835.

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New and revisited insights, theoretical developments, and the emanation of a new political landscape—coupled with the influence of new technologies and social media—suggest that life histories might be considerably more complicated to conduct today than a short generation ago. For example, at least three developments—the rise of a neoliberal, ultra-capitalist, political-economic environment; new technologies, particularly the rise of social media and the shifting social relationships such technologies have engendered; and the Enlightenment counter in posthumanism—have given rise to a postmodern “saturated self.” This “saturated self” is both more situated in the new era and, at the same time, less intimately connected with a surrounding community. This article will explore the critical junctures and concussions of life history with new theoretical, political, and social pressures on the individual and on the practice of creating biography from life history.
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Vučetić, Radina, et Olga Manojlović Pintar. « Social History in Serbia : The Association for Social History ». East Central Europe 34-35, no 1-2 (2008) : 369–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18763308-0340350102023.

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This review essay provides a brief overview of the research and publication activity of the Udruženje za društvenu istoriju/Association for Social History, an innovative scholarly organization established in 1998 in Belgrade, Serbia. The association promotes research on social history in modern South-Eastern Europe, with a focus on former Yugoslavia, and publishes scientific works and historical documents. The driving force behind the activity of the association is a group of young social historians gathered around Professor Andrej Mitrović, at the University of Belgrade. Prof. Mitrović’s work on the “social history of culture” has provided a scholarly framework for a variety of new works dealing with issues of modernization, history of elites, history of ideas, and the diffuse relationship between history and memory. Special attention is given to the Association’s journal, Godišnjak za društvenu istoriju/Annual for Social History, which published studies on economic history, social groups, gender issue, cultural history, modernization, and the history of everyday life in the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries. Methodologically routed in social history, these research projects are interdisciplinary, being a joint endeavor of sociologists, art historians, and scholars of visual culture.
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Rowney, Don K., Heather Hogan, Barbara Alpern Engel, Stephen P. Frank et Mark D. Steinberg. « Russian Social History : A New Lease on Life ? » Journal of Interdisciplinary History 26, no 2 (1995) : 251. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/206608.

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Mingay, G. E., et Howard Newby. « Country Life : A Social History of Rural England. » Economic History Review 41, no 2 (mai 1988) : 306. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2596066.

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Bohstedt, John, et Howard Newby. « Country Life : A Social History of Rural England ». American Historical Review 94, no 4 (octobre 1989) : 1101. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1906665.

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Saikia, Dr Arani. « Social History through the Prism of Family Life ». IOSR Journal of Humanities and Social Science 22, no 01 (janvier 2017) : 14–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.9790/0837-2201061419.

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Norquay, Naomi. « Life History Research : memory, schooling and social difference ». Cambridge Journal of Education 20, no 3 (janvier 1990) : 291–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0305764900200309.

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Wood, Curtis W., et Howard Newby. « Country Life : A Social History of Rural England ». History Teacher 21, no 1 (novembre 1987) : 152. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/492832.

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DOBSON, MIRIAM. « THE SOCIAL HISTORY OF POST-WAR SOVIET LIFE ». Historical Journal 55, no 2 (10 mai 2012) : 563–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x1100063x.

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Winter, Michael. « Country life : a social history of rural England ». Journal of Rural Studies 5, no 1 (janvier 1989) : 111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0743-0167(89)90025-9.

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Lin, Chung‐Ping. « Social behaviour and life history of membracine treehoppers ». Journal of Natural History 40, no 32-34 (4 décembre 2006) : 1887–907. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930601046618.

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Schneider, Tilman C., et Peter M. Kappeler. « Social systems and life-history characteristics of mongooses ». Biological Reviews 89, no 1 (19 juillet 2013) : 173–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/brv.12050.

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Chua, Kristine J., Aaron W. Lukaszewski, DeMond M. Grant et Oliver Sng. « Human Life History Strategies ». Evolutionary Psychology 15, no 1 (17 décembre 2016) : 147470491667734. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474704916677342.

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Human life history (LH) strategies are theoretically regulated by developmental exposure to environmental cues that ancestrally predicted LH-relevant world states (e.g., risk of morbidity–mortality). Recent modeling work has raised the question of whether the association of childhood family factors with adult LH variation arises via (i) direct sampling of external environmental cues during development and/or (ii) calibration of LH strategies to internal somatic condition (i.e., health), which itself reflects exposure to variably favorable environments. The present research tested between these possibilities through three online surveys involving a total of over 26,000 participants. Participants completed questionnaires assessing components of self-reported environmental harshness (i.e., socioeconomic status, family neglect, and neighborhood crime), health status, and various LH-related psychological and behavioral phenotypes (e.g., mating strategies, paranoia, and anxiety), modeled as a unidimensional latent variable. Structural equation models suggested that exposure to harsh ecologies had direct effects on latent LH strategy as well as indirect effects on latent LH strategy mediated via health status. These findings suggest that human LH strategies may be calibrated to both external and internal cues and that such calibrational effects manifest in a wide range of psychological and behavioral phenotypes.
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Tierney, William G. « Life History's History : Subjects Foretold ». Qualitative Inquiry 4, no 1 (mars 1998) : 49–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107780049800400104.

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Starodubets, Galyna. « ANTHROPOLOGY OF MEMORY OF RURAL WOMEN OF ZHYTOMYR REGION ABOUT POST-WAR EVERYDAY LIFE ». Intermarum history policy culture, no 9 (25 décembre 2021) : 195–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.35433/history.112023.

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The purpose of the study. The peculiarities of everyday life in the Ukrainian village during the late Stalinism in the framework of women’s survival experience during the first postwar decade are highlighted in the article. The research is based on the memories of peasant women of Zhytomyr region, whose childhood took place in the 1940s. Methodological basis of the study is historical-anthropological approach, with one of its manifestations being the history of everyday life. Scientific novelty. The research of rural everyday life of peasants in Zhytomyr region from the standpoint of gender approach is accomplished for the first time. The survival strategies of rural women in the postwar period are emphasized. The following components of rural everyday life are analysed: work in a collective farm, ways to meet the material and household needs of the family, the behaviour of peasants in the famine circumstances in 1946-1947. Conclusions. Women’s survival strategies in the post-war everyday life were distinguished by extreme nature and ability to adapt to circumstances. During that period, the epicenter of rural life was not a private family but a collective farm as an important economic and social institution. The famine, hard work of the collective farm and the poverty of post-war everyday life still remain a painful stigma in the social memory of rural women.
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Schatzki, Theodore. « Materiality and Social Life ». Nature and Culture 5, no 2 (1 juin 2010) : 123–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/nc.2010.050202.

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An important issue in contemporary social theory is how social thought can systematically take materiality into account. This article suggests that one way social theory can do so is by working with an ontology that treats materiality as part of society. The article presents one such ontology, according to which social phenomena consist in nexuses of human practices and material arrangements. This ontology (1) recognizes three ways materiality is part of social phenomena, (2) holds that most social phenomena are intercalated constellations of practices, technology, and materiality, and (3) opens up consideration of relations between practices and material arrangements. A brief practice-material history of the Kentucky Bluegrass region where the author resides illustrates the idea that social phenomena evince changing material configurations over time.
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Richter-Devroe, Sophie. « Biography, Life History and Orality ». Hawwa 14, no 3 (5 décembre 2016) : 310–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15692086-12341313.

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The paper traces the ordinary—yet extraordinary—life story of a Bedouin woman, Amneh, in historic Southern Palestine from the 1930s to the 1970s. Amneh’s oral narratives and memories combine the personal and the political, drawing a picture of the lives that the often forgotten Palestinian Bedouin population of the South lived before, during and after theNakba, the Palestinian Catastrophe of 1948. Her counter-narrative challenges and complicates the hegemonic settler-colonial, ethno-nationalist, elite and male-dominated historiography of the region, and confirms her as an historical actor who finds her ways through difficult social, political, economic and cultural constraints. Although unique, her story is not exceptional, nor is it representative of ‘Bedouin women of the Naqab’. Rather, it offers a lens through which the much more intricate and messy historical realities in the Naqab can be unfolded. As such, Amneh’s biography, as told by her, is also telling of the wider social and political dynamics, relations and events in the region at the time.
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Pomeranz, Kenneth. « Social History and World History : From Daily Life to Patterns of Change ». Journal of World History 18, no 1 (2007) : 69–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2007.0006.

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Stade, Ronald S. « The Social Life of Fighting Words ». Conflict and Society 3, no 1 (1 juin 2017) : 108–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/arcs.2017.030109.

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Political correctness has become a fighting word used to dismiss and discredit political opponents. The article traces the conceptual history of this fighting word. In anthropological terms, it describes the social life of the concept of political correctness and its negation, political incorrectness. It does so by adopting a concept-in-motion methodology, which involves tracking the concept through various cultural and political regimes. It represents an attempt to synthesize well-established historiographic and anthropological approaches. A Swedish case is introduced that reveals the kind of large-scale historical movements and deep-seated political conflicts that provide the contemporary context for political correctness and its negation. Thereupon follows an account of the conceptual history of political correctness from the eighteenth century up to the present. Instead of a conventional conclusion, the article ends with a political analysis of the current rise of fascism around the world and how the denunciation of political correctness is both indicative of and instrumental in this process.
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Woolhouse, Clare. « Multimodal life history narrative ». Narrative Inquiry 27, no 1 (21 juillet 2017) : 109–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ni.27.1.06woo.

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Abstract I draw together multimodal and creative art practices with sociological and discursive research frameworks to detail how multimodal interviewing facilitates communication of individual narratives. I offer a route for researching how embodied self-production emerges by asking: What can be learnt from analysing the context and process of narrative accounts rather than the content? Consideration is given to how a drawn visual line influences the narrative progress by inviting diverse, active and embodied engagement, while highlighting issues that participants prioritise. Attention is also given to how self-recognition and the production of identity become apparent in moments that punctuate a narrator’s story-telling. These moments are identified as discursive transitions and include switches in style or topic of conversation, expressions of emotion, pauses and extended silences. These transitions are conceptualised as examples of a ‘structuring presence’ within a narrative, and I explore how these are central to the embodied production of self-identity.
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Cornell, L. L., Steven Mintz et Susan Kellogg. « Domestic Revolutions : A Social History of American Family Life ». Journal of Marriage and the Family 51, no 3 (août 1989) : 831. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/352183.

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Silk, Matthew J., et David J. Hodgson. « Differentiated Social Relationships and the Pace-of-Life-History ». Trends in Ecology & ; Evolution 36, no 6 (juin 2021) : 498–506. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2021.02.007.

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Deutsch, Sarah, Steven Mintz et Susan Kellogg. « Domestic Revolutions : A Social History of American Family Life ». Journal of Interdisciplinary History 19, no 4 (1989) : 684. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/203977.

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Gordon, Linda, Steven Mintz et Susan Kellogg. « Domestic Revolutions : A Social History of American Family Life ». American Historical Review 94, no 3 (juin 1989) : 835. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1873917.

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Ozonliš, Gatis. « HISTORY AND MEMORY IN EVERYDAY LIFE AND SOCIAL TRAUMAS ». Социолошка ревија/The Sociological review, no 1 (2015) : 85–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.47054/sr151085o.

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al-Qattan, Najwa. « Family Life in the Ottoman Mediterranean : A Social History ». Journal of Interdisciplinary History 49, no 3 (novembre 2018) : 524–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_r_01331.

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Courtwright, David T., Steven Mintz et Susan Kellogg. « Domestic Revolutions : A Social History of American Family Life ». History Teacher 22, no 1 (novembre 1988) : 85. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/493106.

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Ben-Bassat, Yuval. « Family life in the ottoman mediterranean : a social history ». Middle Eastern Studies 56, no 6 (29 mai 2020) : 1035–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2020.1767602.

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Sterelny, Kim. « Innovation, life history and social networks in human evolution ». Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B : Biological Sciences 375, no 1803 (juin 2020) : 20190497. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0497.

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There is a famous puzzle about the first 3 million years of archaeologically visible human technological history. The pace of change, of innovation and its uptake, is extraordinarily slow. In particular, the famous handaxes of the Acheulian technological tradition first appeared about 1.7 Ma, and persisted with little change until about 800 ka, perhaps even longer. In this paper, I will offer an explanation of that stasis based in the life history and network characteristics that we infer (on phylogenetic grounds) to have characterized earlier human species. The core ideas are that (i) especially in earlier periods of hominin evolution, we are likely to find archaeological traces only of widespread and persisting technologies and practices; (ii) the record is not a record of the rate of innovation, but the rate of innovations establishing in a landscape; (iii) innovations are extremely vulnerable to stochastic loss while confined to the communities in which they are made and established; (iv) the export of innovation from the local group is sharply constrained if there is a general pattern of hostility and suspicion between groups, or even if there is just little contact between adults of adjoining groups. That pattern is typical of great apes and likely, therefore, to have characterized at least early hominin social lives. Innovations are unlikely to spread by adult-to-adult interactions across community boundaries. (v) Chimpanzees and bonobos are characterized by male philopatry and subadult female dispersal; that is, therefore, the most likely early hominin pattern. If so, the only innovations at all likely to expand beyond the point of origin are those acquired by subadult females, and ones that can be expressed by those females, at high enough frequency and salience for them to spread, in the bands that the females join. These are very serious filters on the spread of innovation. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Life history and learning: how childhood, caregiving and old age shape cognition and culture in humans and other animals’.
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Rubenstein, Daniel I. « Life history and social organization in arid adapted ungulates ». Journal of Arid Environments 17, no 2 (septembre 1989) : 145–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-1963(18)30901-7.

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Negroni, Matteo Antoine, Evelien Jongepier, Barbara Feldmeyer, Boris H. Kramer et Susanne Foitzik. « Life history evolution in social insects : a female perspective ». Current Opinion in Insect Science 16 (août 2016) : 51–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cois.2016.05.008.

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Clark, Clifford E., Steven Mintz et Susan Kellogg. « Domestic Revolutions : A Social History of American Family Life ». Journal of American History 75, no 3 (décembre 1988) : 879. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1901539.

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McMillen, Sally G., Steven Mintz et Susan Kellogg. « Domestic Revolutions : A Social History of American Family Life. » Journal of Southern History 55, no 3 (août 1989) : 462. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2208408.

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Manassa, R. P., et M. I. McCormick. « Social learning improves survivorship at a life-history transition ». Oecologia 171, no 4 (14 septembre 2012) : 845–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-012-2458-x.

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Gillette, Meghan T., et Clinton G. Gudmunson. « Utilizing Evolutionary Life History Theories in Family Studies ». Journal of Family Theory & ; Review 6, no 1 (mars 2014) : 5–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jftr.12025.

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Chernolikhov, Sergiy. « INFANTICIDE AND THE VALUE OF CHILD’S LIFE IN MODERN PRACTICES OF UKRAINIAN SOCIETY (ON THE EXAMPLE OF RIGHT-BANK UKRAINE) ». Intermarum history policy culture, no 14 (29 mai 2024) : 10–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.35433/history.112067.

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The aim of the paper is to analyze the reasons that influenced the attitude of the Ukrainian society to the child’s death, as well as to determine the value of the life of the smallest members of society in the light of infanticide on the example of Right-Bank Ukraine in the second half of the 19th and the early 20th centuries. The research methodology is based on the tools of modern studies of childhood and the history of everyday life, which allow us to reveal the specifics of the problem. The scientific novelty is conditioned by the fact that the attitude of modern Ukrainian society to the child’s death is analyzed on the basis of archival materials of the State Archive of Zhytomyr region, which hightlight the problem of infanticide. Conclusions. High infant mortality was an everyday phenomenon in the modern age in Right-Bank Ukraine. The socio-cultural attitudes of the society contributed to the formation of an indifferent treatment towards the small child’s life at that time, especially one born out of wedlock. The fear of social condemnation and the desire to preserve the socio-economic status pushed unmarried, single women to commit crimes against the lives of their newborn in order to hide the consequences of extramarital relations. In fact, infanticide became the main "women's" crime of the modern period and acquired the characteristics of a social phenomenon. The problem of infanticide, which was considered in the light of the value of a child's life, made it possible to conclude that the child did not have a priority status in society. The community tolerated the commission of crimes against the children’s lives that did not conform to the established social order.
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Jimènez Dìaz, Mario. « The Social Life of Images ». Borders in Globalization Review 3, no 2 (13 juin 2022) : 78–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.18357/bigr32202220787.

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Drawing on visual studies, this mixed-media portfolio explores the mixed culture of the US–Mexico border. Emerging around the turn of the millennium as a multidisciplinary study from such diverse fields as art history, aesthetics, film theory, cultural studies, media theory, visual culture, postcolonial studies, and gender studies, visual studies respond to the need to analyze an area of growing importance in contemporary societies: that of visuality. Therefore, I try to account, without disciplinary restrictions, the processes of production of cultural meaning that have their origin in the public circulation of images. I could, thus, describe my work as investigations into “the social life of images”, analyzing the processes of the cultural construction of visuality.
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Lawrence, Roderick J. « Integrating architectural, social and housing history ». Urban History 19, no 1 (avril 1992) : 39–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926800009627.

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The growth of interest in urban and housing history during recent decades has produced a large volume of studies that has examined broad societal parameters, or themes, such as housing policies, economics and legislation. Concurrently, a growing volume of historical research about households and families has been published, but few studies examine the lifestyles and values of the residents. In sum, there rarely has been any systematic analysis of how longitudinal developments in domestic life are related to developments in the spatial layout, the meaning and use of shared and private spaces and the daily activities these accommodate. In general, the inter-relations between the architectural, cultural and societal dimensions of housing history have commonly been overlooked. This paper argues why, and then illustrates how, integrative concepts and methods can be applied to diversify and enrich recurrent interpretations by referring to a published study of urban housing and daily life in the French- speaking cantons of Switzerland between 1860 and 1960.1
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Attwood, B., D. Chakrabarty et C. Lomnitz. « The Public Life of History ». Public Culture 20, no 1 (1 janvier 2008) : 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/08992363-2007-011.

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Körber, K. « Life insurance and society — pleading for a social history of German life insurance ». Insurance : Mathematics and Economics 22, no 2 (juin 1998) : 194–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0167-6687(98)80058-9.

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Downes, MF. « The Life-History of Badumna-Candida (Araneae, Amaurobioidea) ». Australian Journal of Zoology 41, no 5 (1993) : 441. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo9930441.

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A two-year study of the social spider Badumna candida at Townsville, Queensland, provided information on colony size and changes over time, maturation synchrony, temperature effects on development, sex ratio, dispersal, colony foundation, fecundity and oviposition. Key findings were that B. candida outbred, had an iteroparous egg-production cycle between March and October, had an even primary sex ratio and achieved maturation synchrony by retarding the development of males, which matured faster than females at constant temperature. There was no overlap of generations, the cohort of young from a nest founded by a solitary female in summer dispersing the following summer as subadults (females) or subadults and adults (males). These findings confirm the status of B. candida as a periodic-social spider (an annual outbreeder), in contrast to the few known permanent-social spider species whose generations overlap. Cannibalism, normally rare in social spiders, rose to 48% when spiders were reared at a high temperature. This may be evidence that volatile recognition pheromones suppress predatory instincts in social spiders.
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Bilobrovets, O. « PUBLIC LIFE OF RIGHT BANK UKRAINE THROUGH THE PRISM OF THE JUDICIAL SYSTEM ». Intermarum history policy culture, no 11 (1 décembre 2022) : 168–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.35433/history.112044.

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Review. Shevchuk A. Judicial power in the life of the society of Right Bank Ukraine (end of XVIII - first third of XIX centuries): monograph. Zhytomyr: Evenok, 2022. 580 s. The article reviews the monograph of Andriy Shevchuk, devoted to the study of the judicial system of Right-Bank Ukraine after its incorporation into the Russian Empire. Based on the study of a wide source base and the available special literature, the author reveals the policy of the Russian government in the annexed region, aimed at preserving social stability through concessions to the local elite thanks to the preservation of separate courts, law and official language of the now defunct Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Considerable attention is paid in the work to the construction of imperial justice, the characteristics of the personnel of the courts, and the study of judicial and procedural practices.
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Figueredo, Aurelio José, Paul Robert Gladden et Barbara Hagenah Brumbach. « Sex, aggression, and life history strategy ». Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32, no 3-4 (août 2009) : 278. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0140525x09990422.

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AbstractWe agree that sexual selection is a more comprehensive explanation for sex differences in direct aggression than social role theory, which is an unparsimonious and vestigial remnant of human exceptionalism. Nevertheless, Archer misses several opportunities to put the theoretical predictions made by himself and by others into direct competition in a way that would further the interests of strong inference.
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Spooner, Marc. « A Life History of Place : A Future Place for Life Histories ? » Qualitative Inquiry 25, no 5 (25 décembre 2018) : 513–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077800418817840.

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Diverse in nature, style, and approach, life histories enjoy a rich and established position within the broader narrative and qualitative research traditions. Nevertheless, such a position may be rendered considerably more complicated given new technologies and post-humanist developments. Rather than shy away from such new complexities, the life history field, it is argued, should embrace these developments and explore the fertile ground that might well lie at the intersections of the postqualitative, Indigenous, and place-based turns. What happens when “place” becomes the central character—the complex, entangled protagonist—of a life history focus? Exploring just such a re-imagining, this article examines the potential for creating fecund new ground for a life history of place. As a concrete example—although perhaps an unlikely source for inspiration—Phil Jenkins’s An Acre of Time: The Enduring Value of Place will be offered as a potential prototype.
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Safarov, T. T. « BUKHARA GUZARS AND THEIR ROLE IN THE SOCIO-ECONOMIC LIFE OF THE CITY ». CURRENT RESEARCH JOURNAL OF HISTORY 02, no 11 (1 novembre 2021) : 13–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/history-crjh-02-11-04.

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This article provides information about the guzars created by the dynasties that ruled the city of Bukhara in different historical periods and their place and role in social life. It is known from history that all cities go through a period of development or crisis. While a certain historical situation led to the expansion of the urban area, various invasions served to turn it into a ruin. Of course, history has shown that this fate has not escaped our beloved city.
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Allison, Sarah. « The Social Life of Private Notes ». Victorian Literature and Culture 50, no 4 (2022) : 757–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150322000092.

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Simon Reader's Notework: Victorian Literature and Nonlinear Style, as I discuss below, pushes us to rethink how we understand notes in the nineteenth century and in our own. I will begin with the contemporary implications of Reader's argument by pairing it with Rachel Sagner Buurma and Laura Heffernan's The Teaching Archive: A New History for Literary Study. Both books foreground aspects of the research and writing life that have always supported the publish-or-perish research agenda and yet have seemed instrumental or ephemeral.
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