58 research outputs found

    A union catalogue of Cyrillic manuscripts in British and Irish collections

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    Los Invisibles

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    Examining the social, medical and cultural history of male homosexuality in Spain, this book looks at it from the time homosexuality came to be an issue of medical, legal and cultural concern. Research into homosexuality in Spain is in its infancy. The last ten or fifteen years have seen a proliferation of studies on gender in Spain but much of this work has concentrated on women's history, literature and femininity. In contrast to existing research which concentrates on literature and literary figures, "Los Invisibles" focuses on the change in cultural representation of same-sex activity of through medicalisation, social and political anxieties about race and the late emergence of homosexual sub-cultures in the last quarter of the twentieth century. As such, this book constitutes an analysis of discourses and ideas from a social history and medical history position. Much of the research for the book was supported by a grant from the Wellcome Trust to research the medicalisation of homosexuality in Spain

    Anarchism, colonialism and the question of “race” in Portugal (c.1890-1930)

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    This article explores, through a close reading of newspapers and publications connected to the Portuguese libertarian movement, anarchist discourses and practices around understandings of “race” in Portugal in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A contribution is made both to studies of Lusophone anarchism as well as broader labour movement history where analyses of the interconnections between race and colonialism have been sparse. Portuguese anarchist understandings of race are placed within the context of broader ideas on internationalism within the anarchist movement, contemporary theories of the inheritance of racial characteristics and contestations against notions of nationhood and nationalism. The specific context of Portuguese colonialism and the development of anthropology in the country form the backdrop against which anarchist ideas are analysed. The article argues that while anarchism disrupted certain tropes within racial and colonialist discourse, it also reinforced some cultural categories and rigidified understandings of race, culture and social development

    Liberal governmentality in Spain: bodies, minds, and the medical construction of the “outsider,” 1870–1910

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    This paper traces the fragility of the subject in the period extending from the aftermath of the Sexenio through to the early twentieth century. In particular, two case studies are focused upon: the question of gender “deviance” and the figure of the genius, in order to understand how medicine participated in the construction of “outsider” identities within the context of the emerging liberal order. How did liberal rationales exclude or curtail certain wayward expressions of identity and subjectivity? What consequences did the marking of “excessive” figures or outsiders have for notions of inclusiveness and citizenship within the late-nineteenth-century liberal order? By concentrating primarily on medical texts and journals published during the period, this study builds on existing research to tease out answers to these questions

    Systematic review of reduced therapy regimens for children with low risk febrile neutropenia

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    PURPOSE: Reduced intensity therapy for children with low-risk febrile neutropenia may provide benefits to both patients and the health service. We have explored the safety of these regimens and the effect of timing of discharge. METHODS: Multiple electronic databases, conference abstracts and reference lists were searched. Randomised controlled trials (RCT) and prospective observational cohorts examining the location of therapy and/or the route of administration of antibiotics in people younger than 18 years who developed low-risk febrile neutropenia following treatment for cancer were included. Meta-analysis using a random effects model was conducted. I (2) assessed statistical heterogeneity not due to chance. Registration: PROSPERO (CRD42014005817). RESULTS: Thirty-seven studies involving 3205 episodes of febrile neutropenia were included; 13 RCTs and 24 prospective observational cohorts. Four safety events (two deaths, two intensive care admissions) occurred. In the RCTs, the odds ratio for treatment failure (persistence, worsening or recurrence of fever/infecting organisms, antibiotic modification, new infections, re-admission, admission to critical care or death) with outpatient treatment was 0.98 (95% confidence interval (95%CI) 0.44-2.19, I (2) = 0 %) and with oral treatment was 1.05 (95%CI 0.74-1.48, I (2) = 0 %). The estimated risk of failure using outpatient therapy from all prospective data pooled was 11.2 % (95%CI 9.7-12.8 %, I (2) = 77.2 %) and using oral antibiotics was 10.5 % (95%CI 8.9-12.3 %, I (2) = 78.3 %). The risk of failure was higher when reduced intensity therapies were used immediately after assessment, with lower rates when these were introduced after 48 hours. CONCLUSIONS: Reduced intensity therapy for specified groups is safe with low rates of treatment failure. Services should consider how these can be acceptably implemented

    Assessing grain crop attributes using digital imagery acquired from a low-altitude remote controlled aircraft

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    Considerable research has already been conducted using satellite and aerial imagery to observe cropping areas. However, these imagery platforms have limitations: repeatability, cloud cover, cost and poor spatial resolution. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential of detecting and mapping grain crop attributes using digital imagery acquired from a low-altitude remote controlled aircraft (RCA). The study utilised a digital camera (Kodak DC3200, 1 megapixel, 24-bit) mounted on a RCA of a high-wing cabin-design model of balsa wood construction with a 2m wingspan. The platform was powered by a 10 cc 4-stroke glow fuel (methanol) motor and has a payload of approximately 750g. Preliminary images were acquired on 8 February 2003, over sorghum crop fields (151°54′, –27°40′) 15 km south of Toowoomba, Queensland. The images were captured at approximately 120 m (400 ft) above the ground. Information contained in the images captured include: • canopy density (high and low leaf area index)—due to differences in soil-type, moisture/nutrient status, etc. • other land cover types (grass, soil, asphalt, etc.) • unplanted areas—due to planting misses, germination problems and tree influences. • micro-relief (topography) • fence lines, posts and other infrastructure. The information that this platform-sensor system can provide is potentially useful for many precision agriculture applications and farm planning in general. More work is being conducted that includes the use of infrared filter, geometric correction, multi-temporal acquisition, and the use of video camera

    Anticolonialism in early twentieth-century Portugal: The ambivalences of race and transnationalism in O Negro (1911)

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    “Per la conservació de la raça catalana”: The Catalan Eugenics Society (1935–1937)

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    This article expands on existing work done on the Catalan Eugenics Society and its focus on Josep Vandellós, a demographer and organiser of the Society. It places the Catalan Eugenics Society within the growing volume of work on the international, particularly “Latin” eugenics movement. In doing so, it explores discourse on questions of “race,” immigration and “national” identity as refracted through the nascent eugenics movement and the political concerns of the time in Catalonia. In particular, the article assesses the question of “racial mixing” between Catalans and Spaniards from other regions and argues that, rather than rejecting miscegenation outright, Vandellós valued certain mixes as part of a eugenic project to fortify and maintain the Catalan “race” in the face of population loss and the dissolution of Catalan identity
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