出生 发表于 2025-3-25 06:58:24
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Medicine and Mobility in Nineteenth-Century British Literature, History, and Culture: An Introductie ways in which they interconnect. Sandra Dinter and Sarah Schäfer-Althaus explore the professionalisation, institutionalisation, and commercialisation of medical practice and research in conjunction with the effects of the transport revolution on British national and colonial identity, class, and gHATCH 发表于 2025-3-25 17:14:45
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Watering Holes: Healthy Waters and Moral Dangers in the Nineteenth-Century Novelessary to health. But even in the mid-nineteenth century, the focus on encouraging the skin’s excretions evoked the opposite possibility: many worried that both the skin’s amazing porosity and the disproportionate attention given to the body made the self vulnerable to “foreign” elements. Spa townsamygdala 发表于 2025-3-26 01:46:06
Embodied Interdependencies of Health and Travel in Henry James’s , and Thomas Hardy’s n Henry James’s . (1881) and Thomas Hardy’s . (1891). In both novels, protagonists navigate possibilities and perils of motion while embarking on international voyages and rural wanderings. On the one hand, the mobility of Isabel Archer and Tess Durbeyfield merges a focus on the proliferation of tra无能力之人 发表于 2025-3-26 06:25:48
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A “Feverish Restlessness”: Dance as Decadent Mobility in Late Victorian Poetry traces interconnections between the .—a metaphor evoked by opponents as well as advocates of literary Decadence—and poetic renditions of dance as erratic, anti-progressive forms of mobility. The first section discusses the pathological terminology employed by fin-de-siècle critics such as Max Norda