Academic literature on the topic 'Bibliography – Early works to 1800'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bibliography – Early works to 1800"

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Smith, Bruce R. "Premodern Sexualities." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 115, no. 3 (2000): 318–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/463453.

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Punch in sexuality as a search word in the MLA online bibliography, and you'll come up with well over three thousand items published since 1981. By my estimate, at least ten percent of the journal and book articles and dissertations in this list are concerned with sexuality in texts written before 1800. Add to that the scores of books on sexuality in medieval and early modern literature that have been published during the past fifteen years, and you have quite a pile of reading to do if you want to keep up-to-date. Not bad for a subject that didn't even exist when the literary texts in question were written—and still may not exist, at least in words.
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Smith, Nathan E. C. "Narrative histories in mycology and the legacy of George Edward Massee (1845–1917)." Archives of Natural History 47, no. 2 (2020): 361–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2020.0661.

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Mycology is a relatively small and young discipline that has yet to achieve the institutional presence of similar disciplines such as botany and zoology. Because of this, mycological histories are often written by practitioners aiming to establish a narrative of professionalization that confirms mycology as a scientific discipline instead of a natural history pursuit. George Edward Massee (1845–1917) was one of the foremost mycologists of the late nineteenth century, achieving the top position in the field as Principal Assistant (Cryptogams) at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and publishing over 250 books and articles. Providing a link between the great Victorian mycologists Mordecai Cubitt Cooke (1825–1914) and the Revd Miles Joseph Berkeley (1803–1889) and the more modern school that included the likes of Elsie Maud Wakefield (1886–1972), he achieved this position without a university education. However, since his death, his achievements have been subject to multiple negative assessments and, as a result, he has become increasingly obscured in the history of British mycology. The majority of these unfavourable appraisals originated from the publications of Dr John Ramsbottom (1885–1974), a mycologist and historian who was a key member of the British Mycological Society and a founding member of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History. These articles were published across the first half of the twentieth century, and Ramsbottom's works have since become standard texts in both the biography of Massee and the history of British mycology. Here I question the validity of the substance of Ramsbottom's claims against Massee, given the circumstances under which Ramsbottom's articles were written and the relationship between Massee and the fledgling British Mycological Society, initially run by Carleton Rea (1861–1946) and of which Ramsbottom was a senior member. I examine wider reasons for such strong criticism of Massee and explore the professional differences and relationships between Massee and Ramsbottom, placing the analysis firmly in the context of changing scientific practice occurring in the early twentieth century.
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Špelda, Daniel. "Kepler in the Early Historiography of Astronomy (1615–1800)." Journal for the History of Astronomy 48, no. 4 (2017): 381–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021828617740948.

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This article discusses the reception of Kepler’s work in the earliest interpretations of the history of astronomy, which appeared in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The focus is not on the reception of Kepler’s work among astronomers themselves but instead on its significance for the history of science as seen by early historians of mathematics and astronomy. The first section discusses the evaluation of Kepler in the so-called “Prefatory Histories” of astronomy that appeared in various astronomical works during the seventeenth century. In these, Kepler was considered mainly to be the person who brought the work of Tycho Brahe to completion, rather than an original astronomer. The second section is devoted to the evaluation of Kepler in interpretations of the history of astronomy that appeared in the eighteenth century (often as part of the history of mathematics). In these works, Kepler is regarded as a genius who deserves tremendous credit for the advancement of the human spirit. Both sections also devote attention to Copernicus and Tycho Brahe because this facilitates the explanation of how Kepler’s contribution was judged. By studying the reception of Johannes Kepler’s work, we may gain greater insight into the transition from a cyclical perception of the history of science to the progressive model.
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Phyllis E. Wachter. "Bibliography of Works about Life-Writing for the Early '90s." Biography 17, no. 4 (1994): 396–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bio.2010.0225.

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Phyllis E. Wachter. "Bibliography of Works about Life-Writing for the Early '90s." Biography 16, no. 4 (1993): 409–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bio.2010.0517.

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Phyllis E. Wachter. "Bibliography of Works about Life-Writing for the Early '90s." Biography 15, no. 4 (1992): 400–413. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bio.2010.0840.

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Klein, Kenneth. "Bibliography of Western Works on Early Medieval China (2002–2009)." Early Medieval China 2010, no. 16 (2010): 67–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/152991010x12863647122361.

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Klein, Kenneth. "Bibliography of Western Works on Early Medieval China (1994-96)." Early Medieval China 1997, no. 1 (1997): 110–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/152991097788220505.

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Pierce, Robert A., and Gregory Hanlon. "Early Modern Italy: A Comprehensive Bibliography of Works in English and French." Sixteenth Century Journal 34, no. 3 (2003): 805. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20061548.

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Chennault, Cynthia L. "An Annotated Bibliography of Western Works on Early Medieval China (1997-2001)." Early Medieval China 2002, no. 1 (2002): 99–136. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/152991002788193861.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bibliography – Early works to 1800"

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McNally, Louis K. "The Weather of 1785: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Meteorological Reconstruction Using Forensic Synoptic Analysis." Fogler Library, University of Maine, 2004. http://www.library.umaine.edu/theses/pdf/McNallyLK2004.pdf.

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Préfontaine, Jennifer. "Secrets des femmes." Thesis, McGill University, 2006. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=98575.

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The goal of this thesis is a critical edition of the Secrets des femmes, a text attributed to Arnold de Vilanova. In the exegetic tradition, this attribution has been widely argued. Our preliminary findings lead to the same conclusions. The text composed in French couldn't have been written by Vilanova, who would have composed it in Latin, the language of the "clerks", or in Catalan, his first language. Critical tradition shows that the Secrets des femmes is based on three manuscripts. But we have demonstrated that the Mazarine's manuscript is not at the base of this work, but rather of a text entitled Les Termes et secrets des femmes. For the critical edition, which is the objective of our study, there is no doubt that the Arsenal's text is the basic manuscript, while the Vatican's manuscript is the Arsenal's metalanguage.
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Labriola, Daniele. "On Plato's conception of philosophy in the Republic and certain post-Republic dialogues." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/4497.

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This dissertation is generally concerned with Plato's conception of philosophy, as the conception is ascertainable from the Republic and certain ‘post-Republic' dialogues. It argues that philosophy, according to Plato, is multi-disciplinary; that ‘philosophy' does not mark off just one art or science; that there are various philosophers corresponding to various philosophical sciences, all of which come together under a common aim: betterment of self through intellectual activity. A major part of this dissertation is concerned with Plato's science par excellence, ‘the science of dialectic' (he epistêmê dialektikê). The science of dialectic is distinguished in Plato by being concerned with Forms or Kinds as such; the science of dialectic, alone amongst the philosophical sciences, fully understands what it means for Form X to be a Form. I track the science of dialectic, from its showcase in Republic VI and VII, and analyze its place in relation to the other philosophical sciences in certain post-Republic dialogues. Ultimately, I show that, whilst it is not the only science constituting philosophy, Plato's science of dialectic represents the intellectual zenith obtainable by man; the expert of this science is the topmost philosopher. In this dissertation I also argue that Socrates, as variously depicted in these dialogues, always falls short of being identified as the philosopher par excellence, as that expert with positive knowledge of Forms as such. Yet I also show that, far from being in conflict, the elenctic Socrates and the philosopher par excellence form a complementary relationship: the elenctic philosopher gets pupils to think about certain things in the right way prior to sending them off to work with the philosopher par excellence.
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蔡瑞珩. "《鍼經指南》之鍼刺手法研究". HKBU Institutional Repository, 2015. https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_oa/132.

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《鍼經指南》為元代竇默,字漢卿,所著。其所記載的鍼刺手法上承《黃帝內經》、《難經》,下啟《金鍼賦》、《玉龍歌》、《鍼灸大成》等,為鍼刺手法發展史上里程碑,亦是後世各種複式手法發展的啟蒙。 本文通過對《鍼經指南》相關鍼刺手法的篇章進行整理,從"呼吸補瀉"、"燃轉補瀉"、"提插補瀉"、"迎隨補瀉"、"寒熱補瀉",及"手指補瀉十四法"等方面展開分析,分別探討《鍼經指南》的學術淵源和《鍼經指南》對元明時期鍼刺手法發展的影響。最後將相關醫家觀點與《鍼經指南》中鍼刺手法理論進行對比分析,討論其異同點。 通過資料整理,學術思想的對比分析,筆者總結《鍼經指南》對鍼刺手法理論主要貢獻是:1.提出調息治神法﹔ 2.熱補涼瀉復合補瀉手法﹔ 3."提鍼豆許"手法技巧﹔ 4."瀉南補北"迎隨補瀉理論。元代與明代主要鍼灸醫家的手法技巧和鍼刺理論均從《鍼經指南》的內容中發展與推衍出來。 根據研究結果顯示,鍼刺手法自《鍼經指南》后空前發展。鍼刺補瀉理論體系更加完善,手法操作更加繁複。符合由簡而繁的事物發展規律。此外,後世醫家在臨床實踐中將《鍼經指南》的鍼刺手法理論與當代文化思想結合并產生新的鍼刺手法及鍼刺理論,從另一方面體現了理論與實踐相結合的哲學思想。 關鍵詞:誠刺手法﹔《鍼經指南》﹔竇漢卿
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Kotarcic, Ana. "Aristotle's concept of lexis : a theory of language and style." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/7754.

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Aristotle's concept of lexis has been discussed by numerous scholars, yet no comprehensive account of lexis has been produced so far. To fill this gap in scholarship, this thesis offers a systematic analysis of Aristotle's concept of lexis by dividing it into three levels, which allow a step-by-step approach to understanding this multi-layered concept. By considering Plato's and Isocrates' thoughts on lexis, Chapter 1 outlines the intellectual context in which Aristotle's ideas on the concept of lexis developed. Chapters 2-5 focus on the three levels of lexis and Chapter 6 brings a concluding discussion of metaphor. In Chapter 2 the linguistic elements treated under the notion of lexis and Aristotle's theory of language are delineated. These not only present Aristotle's thoughts on language as an abstract system, but they also form the most fundamental level upon which the remainder of Aristotle's thoughts on the concept of lexis are based. Chapter 3 explores Aristotle's remarks regarding individuals' use of linguistic elements as determined by sociolinguistic factors. Aristotle's occasional statements about language usage within the concept of lexis provide valuable pieces of evidence for studies in sociolinguistics and for his ideas on lexis on its third level as discussed in Chapters 4 and 5. In Chapter 4 the intra-textual aspect of Aristotle's remarks on lexis as a means for the creation of different kinds of poetry and rhetoric, i.e. lexis as technē, is examined. In Chapter 5 extra-textual factors are considered and are followed by a discussion of the purpose and function of lexis on its third level. Chapter 6 concludes the discussion of lexis by focusing on metaphor, the linguistic and stylistic element par excellence treated under the notion of lexis, which further highlights the benefits of a three-level approach to Aristotle's concept of lexis.
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Littlehailes, Lucy Elizabeth. "Vital heat, conception and development in Aristotle." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1990. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:a8e96b05-0ff7-4791-a65a-6135be68df57.

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In this account of the pan that heat plays in the conception and development of living substances according to Aristotle, I begin by examining the concept of heat. I discover that Aristotle uses a distinction between to thermon and thermotes: the former is, in living substances, material; the latter is never material, being the powerful aspect of heat. For example, an animal possesses heat (to thermon) which maintains it through its power (thermotes) to concoct. I then turn to the biological works. Conception, it seems, does not fit the standard account of change, but is rather a concoction, performed by the heat of the semen. Nor is the usual account of conception ascribed to Aristotle adequate: I attempt to demonstrate that he held a more moderate account in which pneuma, the nature of which is to thermon, is transmitted to the embryo. I then examine the development of the embryo, which is performed using to thermon as a tool. The transmission and development of the rational psuche in particular has often caused problems: I offer an account of the transmission of psuche from parent to embryo, and describe the part that pneuma plays in this transmission and in the development and operation of the various levels of psuche. Development extends from foetal development until adulthood, and this poses another problem for the standard account of change as it appears to be neither substantial nor accidental change, yet these are apparently exhaustive possibilities. I conclude that development, like conception, is a concoction performed by the vital heat. Finally, I turn to the conception and development of spontaneously generated animals, and of abnormal animals such as monsters. I demonstrate the relationship between these generations and sexual generation, and the significance of heat and pneuma.
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周瑩. "古代飲茶致病的文獻探究". HKBU Institutional Repository, 2015. https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_oa/127.

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中國茶文化源遠流長,茶作為一種日常飲品,與咖啡、可可並稱為世界三大無酒精飲料。近年來,隨著人們生活水平的日益提高,茶葉的保健功效越來越受到社會的重視。據各文獻史料記載,我國飲用茶葉已有千年曆史,記載有關茶葉的文獻古籍繁多。而一直以來,茶葉與“健康”一詞密不可分,古人經過歸納前人的記述總結出了茶葉的二十四功效,如清熱、消食、醒酒、去疾等,並對茶有著極高的評價,然而很少人注意到通過飲茶所達到的有利功效需要建立在適度飲茶,科學飲茶的前提下,盲目品飲只會起到相反效果。與此同時,隨著醫學經驗、藥學知識的日益豐富,不當飲茶所帶來的一些副作用同樣也引起了古代醫學家與茶人的重視,人們開始不僅只是單純的追求茶葉的口感,更多的是開始關注飲茶對身體的影響及飲茶時的身心體驗,通過自己多年的親身感悟,長期與他人的經驗分享,總結歸納出了飲茶的利弊,教導後人飲茶需有度,因人而飲。 本文擬在分析我國古代文獻中飲茶不當導致的疾病,尋找飲用單一味茶葉對人體所產生的不良反應,其中不包括複方茶及非茶之“茶”,通過歸納、整理,探究古代不當飲茶所造成的對人體的危害疾病,提出適度飲茶,健康飲茶,科學飲茶的觀念,為今後的茶學及醫學研究不當飲茶致病因素提供古代文獻線索依據。 關鍵字:過度飲茶,過派飲茶,飲茶致病
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Harrop, Patrick H. "Inseminate architecture : an archontological reading of Athanasius Kircher's Turris Babel." Thesis, McGill University, 1992. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=56976.

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Among the vast assembly of Biblical mythology, the tower of Babel stands as an exclusive representation of the limits of human endeavor. As a paradigmatic extremity, it circumscribes the field of civic artifice. Babel is the absolute limit, and in that regard, its presence is enduring and timeless. The legacy of exegetic readings are textual shades, emanating from the point source of the paradigm. Athanasius Kircher's Turris Babel is an appropriate and intentional unfolding of this condition.<br>Firstly, that in the awakening of the Baroque scholar to history, origin materializes as the sole legitimate chronological reference.<br>Secondly, that the paradigmatic extremities collapse into the empirical standard of the theoretical discourse.<br>This thesis is a speculative study of architecture, drawn through Turris Babel, in the shadow of the paradigmatic limits of Babel. Written in three parts, each dealing with the implications of artifice in confrontation with the post-Babel adversaries of dispersion, tyranny, and decay.
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朱加正 and Ka-ching Chu. "Reflections of the development and philosophy of Mathematics originating in a comparative study of Liu Hui's redaction of 'JiuZhang Suan Shu' and Euclid's 'Elements'." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1992. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31211380.

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Letts, Melinda. "Questioning the patient, questioning Hippocrates : Rufus of Ephesus and the limits of medical authority." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2015. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:917c8cac-6fb4-4217-95df-8e3f9db8692f.

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Rufus of Ephesus's 'Quaestiones Medicinales' is an under-studied work by one of the most respected doctors of Greco-Roman antiquity. This thesis presents a new translation - the first in English of the complete work - and a reassessment of the treatise. I propose that, far from being a simple handbook teaching doctors how to take a patient history, as has hitherto been assumed, QM is an ardent plea for doctors to recognise the limits of their own knowledge and the indispensability of questioning the patient. I argue that QM articulates the idea that the aim of medicine cannot be achieved through medical knowledge alone, and that, in constructing the patient as an essential partner in diagnosis and decisions about treatment, Rufus implies a sharing of authority between doctor and patient that is noticeably different from the emphasis that other authors, particularly the determinedly hierarchical Galen, place on securing patients' obedience, a subject on which Rufus is noticeably silent. I argue that Rufus is unusual in the clarity and candour with which he perceives and acknowledges the limits of medical knowledge, in his conceptualisation of questioning as a discursive rather than a formulaic activity, in his explicit insistence that it must be addressed directly to the patient, in his psychological concept of habits, and in his recommendation of questioning as a strategy for resolving the tension between universal theory and individual experience. I look at modern cross-cultural research into the factors that drive patient compliance, and note that chief among them is patients feeling they are partners in the treatment process. This raises the question whether and to what extent the features that drive compliance are diachronically as well as cross-culturally consistent, and whether Rufus's shared authority model is more likely to have produced successful treatment outcomes than the autocratic paradigm promoted by Galen, and subsequently absorbed into Western medical tradition, that seems to have met with so much resistance.
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Books on the topic "Bibliography – Early works to 1800"

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A, Van Seventer, ed. Accounting bibliography: Historical approach. Bay Books, 1986.

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Baginsky, Paul Ben. Americana Germanica: Paul Ben Baginsky's bibliography of German works relating to America, 1493-1800. Heritage Books, 1994.

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Hooker, Brian. Early New Zealand printed maps. DelZur Research, 2000.

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McCorkle, Barbara B. New England in early printed maps, 1513 to 1800: An illustrated carto-bibliography. John Carter Brown Library, 2001.

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Pardoel, Henk. A bibliography of the art and sport of fencing. School of Physical and Health Education, Queen's University, 1995.

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A bibliography of Johann Remmelin, the anatomist. J.F. Russell, 1991.

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Frostick, Raymond. The printed plans of Norwich, 1558-1840: A carto-bibliography. Frostick, 2002.

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Gweneth, Whitteridge, and English Christine, eds. A bibliography of the writings of Dr. William Harvey, 1578-1657. 3rd ed. St Paul's Bibliographies, 1989.

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1957-, Balensuela C. Matthew, ed. Music theory from Boethius to Zarlino: A bibliography and guide. Pendragon Press, 2007.

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Henrey, Blanche. British botanical and horticultural literature before 1800: Comprising a history and bibliography of botanical and horticultural books printed in England, Scotland, and Ireland from the earliest times until 1800. Oxford University Press, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bibliography – Early works to 1800"

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Prieto, Moisés. "Corrupt and Rapacious: Colonial Spanish-American Past Through the Eyes of Early Nineteenth-Century Contemporaries. A Contribution from the History of Emotions." In Palgrave Studies in Comparative Global History. Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-0255-9_5.

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AbstractAround 1800, merchants, scientists and adventurers travelled to Latin America with different purposes. Their multifaceted interests in a world region, experiencing a threshold of independence from Spanish colonial rule, inspired new historical and political works about the continent’s recent past. The Enlightenment provided not only the philosophical armamentarium against corruption, but it also paved the way to a new expression of sentiments and to the loss of fear when addressing injustice. Some examples of these are Hipólito Villaroel’s list of grievances and Humboldt’s Political essay. These two authors provide some thoughts on the political landscape of New Spain (now Mexico), while the two Swiss physicians Rengger and Longchamp describe the ruthless and odd dictator Francia of independent Paraguay as a champion of anti-corruption. Finally, Argentine dictator Rosas—and his robberies as described by Rivera Indarte, Sarmiento and other anonymous authors—represent the embodiment of corruption through pure larceny, for whose crimes the Spanish colonial past apparently no longer served as a comparison.
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"Bibliography of Secondary Works." In Early Modern Jewry. Princeton University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400834693-012.

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"How the bibliography works." In Clandestine Erotic Fiction in English 1800–1930. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315260112-14.

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"Select Bibliography (Works Published after 1800)." In Conflict and Enlightenment. Cambridge University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781139021289.009.

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"Bibliography of printed sources and secondary works." In Scottish Society, 1500–1800. Cambridge University Press, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511660252.011.

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"Bibliography of Secondary Works." In News in Early Modern Europe. BRILL, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004276864_015.

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Brink, Jean R. "Bibliography of works cited." In The early Spenser, 1554–80. Manchester University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7765/9781526142597.00018.

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"Bibliography of secondary works." In State and Society in the Early Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511496349.011.

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"BIBLIOGRAPHY OF WORKS CITED." In The Early Works of Arnold Schoenberg 1893–1908. University of California Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520322370-015.

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"Supplementary Bibliography of Secondary Works." In The Youth of Early Modern Women. Amsterdam University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789048534982-017.

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