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A History of English: Volume I: From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English)
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A History of English: Volume I: From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English)This book is the first since 1897 to describe the earliest reconstructable stages of the prehistory of English. It outlines the grammar of Proto-Indo-European, considers the changes by which one dialect of that prehistoric language developed into Proto-Germanic, and provides a detailed account of the grammar of Proto-Germanic. The first volume in Don Ringe's A Linguistic History of English will be of central interest to all scholars and students of comparative Indo-European and Germanic linguistics, the history of English, and historical linguists. The next volume will consider the development of Proto-Germanic into Old English. Subsequent volumes will describe the attested history of English from the Old English period to the present.
 
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Tags: English, ProtoGermanic, History, ProtoIndoEuropean, Linguistic
Reading the Bronte Body: Disease, Desire, and the Constraints of Culture
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Reading the Bronte Body: Disease, Desire, and the Constraints of CultureAnne, Emily, and Charlotte Bronte's literary representations of illness and disease reflect the major role illness played in the lives of the Victorians and its frequent reoccurrence within the Brontes' personal lives. An in-depth analysis of the history of nineteenth-century medicine provides the cultural context for these representations, giving modern readers a sense of how health, illness, and the body were understood in Victorian England. Together, medical anthropology and the history of medicine offer a useful lens with which to understand Victorian texts.
 
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Tags: illness, history, medicine, Victorian, representations
The axe had never sounded - Place, people and heritage of Recherche Bay, Tasmania
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The axe had never sounded - Place, people and heritage of Recherche Bay, TasmaniaThis book meets well the triple promise of the title - the inter-connections of place, people and heritage. John Mulvaney brings to this work a deep knowledge of the history, ethnography and archaeology of Tasmania. He presents a comprehensive account of the area’s history over the 200 years since French naval expeditions first charted its coastlines. The important records the French officers and scientists left of encounters with Aboriginal groups are discussed in detail, set in the wider ethnographic context and compared with those of later expeditions. The topical issues of understanding the importance of Recherche Bay as a cultural landscape and its protection and future management inform the book. Readers will be challenged to consider the connections between people and place, and how these may constitute significant national heritage
 
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Tags: people, heritage, French, Tasmania, history
TMS—Icons of the Iron Age: The Celts in History
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TMS—Icons of the Iron Age: The Celts in HistoryAmong the most famous peoples in ancient times were the Celts, who lived in Europe during the Iron Age, from about 600 BCE into the early centuries CE. They fascinated ancient Classical writers of Greece and Rome, who wrote about them often. They left behind an intriguing record of physical remains that have been recovered by archaeologists, and they have continued to hold our attention as modern populations claim a Celtic identity.
Using historical, archaeological, linguistic, and anthropological evidence, Professor Johnston provides an intriguing look at the ancient Celtic peoples of Europe, Britain, and Ireland.
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Tags: celt, celts, history, europe, ancient, about, Celtic, intriguing, Celts, ancient
Infertilities: Exploring Fictions of Barren Bodies
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Infertilities: Exploring Fictions of Barren BodiesIn today's global market, ideas about family, femininity, and reproduction are traded on as actively as any currency or stock. The connection has a history, one rooted in a conception of feminine identities invented through a science interwoven with the pursuit of empire, the accumulation of goods, and the furtherance of power. It is this history that Robin Truth Goodman exposes in her provocative analysis of literary and political representations of female infertility from the mid-nineteenth century to our day.
 
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Tags: history, exposes, provocative, analysis, Goodman