Showing 901 - 920 results of 1,469 for search '"This Is England"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
  1. 901

    Londres, les années 1620 by Michael Palmer

    Published 2021-11-01
    “…The author looks at current events in early 17th century England, a period in which news appeared in the first newspapers, known as corantos, but was also the theme of plays about those who wrote and sold the news. …”
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  2. 902
  3. 903

    Pharmacological pain management in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a narrative literature review by Natasha Cox, Christian D. Mallen, Ian C. Scott

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Despite this evidence base, 21 studies of analgesic prescribing in patients with RA consistently showed substantial and sustained prescribing of analgesics, particularly opioids, with approximately one quarter and > 40% of patients receiving chronic opioid prescriptions in each year in England and North America, respectively. Whilst NSAID prescribing had fallen over time across countries, gabapentinoid prescribing in England had risen from < 1% of patients in 2004 to approximately 10% in 2020. …”
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  4. 904

    Spatio‐Temporal Changes in Effective Population Size in an Expanding Metapopulation of Eurasian Otters by Nia Evelyn Thomas, Elizabeth A. Chadwick, Michael W. Bruford, Frank Hailer

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…We obtained clear bottleneck signals in East England, and signals of recent population expansion in Wales and South West England in some analyses, consistent with national otter surveys and recent findings from whole‐genome sequencing. …”
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  5. 905

    « A Whore entring into prison is a Hony-pot ». Les geôles au féminin (xvie-xviiie siècles) by Natalia Muchnik

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…It is precisely the place of women and the measures it gives rise to that this contribution proposes to examine in France, England and Spain.…”
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  6. 906
  7. 907

    La mise en image des magazines. Le choix crucial et victorieux des utilitaristes anglais dans les années 1830 by Jean-Pierre Bacot

    Published 2007-01-01
    “…In this article, I consider the birth of the first illustrated magazine in the context of editorial trends in England in the 1830s, a period of political and social change. …”
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  8. 908

    Ricardo Guilherme Dicke e o processo de transculturação na l iteratura by Adriana Lins Precioso, louchabel Sarratchara de Fátima Falcão

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…The article presents a brief overview of the emergence of the cultural studies in England, the concepts of Stuart Hall and the appropriation of these searches by the literary studies, mainly in Latin America represented through the contributions of Ángel R ama. …”
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  9. 909

    Figurations of Attachment in Sylvia Plath and Halina Poświatowska by Agnieszka Pantuchowicz

    Published 2019-01-01
    “…For these two women writers the change of the place of living (from America to England in the case of Plath, and from Poland to America in the case of Halina Poświatowska) was a significant event which can be read as a history in which the topographical change becomes crucial for the construction of autobiographical memory. …”
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  10. 910

    Pilgrimage and Pilgrim Hierarchies in Vernacular Discourse: Comparative Notes from the Camino de Santiago and Glastonbury by Tiina Sepp

    Published 2014-04-01
    “…This article is based on my fieldwork conducted in two important destinations in the spiritual landscape of European vernacular religion – the Camino de Santiago (pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela) in northern Spain, and Glastonbury in southwest England. In this comparison between modern expressions of pilgrimage, I look into the power relationships that exist on the pilgrimage, describe how hierarchies of pilgrims are created and maintained, and reflect on the meaning of the words pilgrim and pilgrimage. …”
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  11. 911

    Spenser’s Popular Pastoral: Hodgepodges and Genre Trouble in The Shepheardes Calender by Abigail Shinn

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…The Calender thus offers a playful, and provocative, reimagining of pastoral which advertises Spenser’s roving cultural palate and solidifies his claim to be England’s new poet.…”
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  12. 912

    Étrange ou ennemi ? Typologie de l’étranger, construction identitaire et circonvolutions du discours dans l’Angleterre des XVIe et XVIIe siècles by Michèle Vignaux

    Published 2008-03-01
    “…Taking Bacon’s and Coke’s definitions of strangers in the Case of the Post-Nati (1605) as a starting point, this article examines the implications of defining English citizens as subjects owing allegiance to the King of England by looking at the various types of allegiance (which may be implicit or explicit, geographically or temporally limited or unlimited). …”
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  13. 913
  14. 914

    Melonworm, Diaphania hyalinata Linnaeus (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) by John L. Capinera

    Published 2003-12-01
    “…Its distribution during the summer months is principally the southeastern states, though occasionally it disperses north to New England and the Great Lakes region. This document is EENY-163, one of a series of Featured Creatures from the Entomology and Nematology Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. …”
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  15. 915

    Fort-de-France et Pointe-à-Pitre : deux villes américaines ? by Christophe Charlery

    Published 2012-04-01
    “…We will follow the process of dissemination of a standard type of building that was developed in England during the 18th century and that spread from 1790 to the 1820’s along the East Coast of the former Anglo–American colonies, between Boston and New Orleans. …”
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  16. 916
  17. 917

    Staging Sedition despite Censorship: the Representation of the People on the Shakespearean Stage in 2 Henry VI by Delphine Lemonnier-Texier

    Published 2013-11-01
    “…Due to the lack of archival evidence, circumscribing the phenomenon of stage censorship in Early Modern England is a difficult task. Thanks to The Book of Sir Thomas More, there is proof that the Master of the Revels did censor scenes of popular sedition, and the presence of similar and yet apparently uncensored scenes in other Elizabethan plays is somewhat puzzling, even more so when these scenes of popular rebellion appear ambivalent, which is the case of the Jack Cade rebellion in Shakespeare’s 2 Henry VI. …”
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  18. 918

    La nuit entre histoire et littérature by Alain Cabantous

    Published 2020-07-01
    “…But the comparative approach to night between France and England not only reveals different sensibilities, but also shows that night was an original creative wellspring that spread, among a broad Western European public, its terrifying models of night, conveyed no less by Elizabethan theatre than by tomb poetry or gothic novels.…”
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  19. 919

    Nemo me impune lacessit or Ne obliviscaris? The Highlander Soldier in British Parliamentary Debates (18th-21st centuries) by Pierre-Louis Coudray

    Published 2023-10-01
    “…This article draws on Cobbett’s Parliamentary History of England,2 official transcripts of parliamentary debates provided by British History Online3 and Hansard4, as well as on press articles, in order to demonstrate that the Highlander soldier, whose uniform is instantly recognisable, was seen either as a threat to, or as a symbol of, British power and that he fitted in wider discussions on defence and Scottish identity.…”
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  20. 920

    The Paradox of the Pavements – How the Cultural Value of Limestone Pavements Resulted in Widespread Damage to These Landforms Across Northern Britain and What Has Been Done about i... by Murphy Phillip

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…Legal protection was provided in the 1980s and extraction has since been halted in England. This has been a geoconservation success story but there are ongoing concerns that damage may have been displaced to other areas of the British Isles.…”
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