1-14 of 14

Search Results for mist

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1969) 49 (2): 324–325.
Published: 01 May 1969
...Loren E. Pennington Northern Mists . By Sauer Carl O. . Berkeley , 1968 . University of California Press . Illustrations. Maps. Notes. Index . Pp. 204 . $5.75 . Copyright 1969 by Duke University Press 1969 Carl O. Sauer has combined a broad knowledge of geography...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1982) 62 (1): 142.
Published: 01 February 1982
... Mist in 1968, and Sixteenth-Century North America: The Land and People as Seen by Europeans in 1971. The volume under review deals with the Borderlands of New Spain, New France, and the Gulf area. It relies heavily on excerpts from contemporary sources, such as government reports, accounts...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1966) 46 (3): 349.
Published: 01 August 1966
... and the Seven Cities of Cíbola, found inspiration for his latest book in a youthful reading of Lockhart’s Ancient Spanish Ballads . Owing to the heavy mist of myth enveloping them, the life and deeds of the eleventh-century hero, El Cid Campeador, inevitably remain dim and imprecise. (The fact that the Cid...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1987) 67 (3): 517–518.
Published: 01 August 1987
... 1987 From the mists of the past, biographers are extracting and fleshing out the ghostly figures of the Haitian Revolution. Robert Stein has done this for the Jacobin commissioner and abolitionist, Léger Félicité Sonthonax. There has been a tendency among historians, myself included, to cast...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1993) 73 (3): 505–506.
Published: 01 August 1993
... the genealogical tables are clut-tered and repetitious. Few readers will care to complete the circuitous route that Barreto sets them on; but this is just as well, since the route has no discernible departure point or terminus. Like so many others, Barreto claims to have penetrated the mist that surrounds...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1970) 50 (2): 355–357.
Published: 01 May 1970
... in drafting plans for future military collaboration among Hemisphere nations. Through the mists of a quarter-century it is surprising to find the State Department using its informal good offices (even the home of Acting Secretary Joseph C. Grew) to initiate conversations between Latin American diplomats...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2005) 85 (1): 179–180.
Published: 01 February 2005
... labor leaders and politicians. He has interviewed hundreds of labor leaders, politicians, and bureaucrats. The interviews were frequently conducted directly after the events being discussed; this makes them particularly valuable, unclouded as the subjects’ impressions are by the mists of time. Alexander...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2000) 80 (2): 387–389.
Published: 01 May 2000
... of Mist,” taken from a journal published in 1905, records the rise of an immigrant middle class in São Paulo about the same time as in the United States. Sometimes the editors are less successful in conveying the complexity of Brazil. The section entitled “Slavery and its Aftermath” contains only...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1989) 69 (4): 677–690.
Published: 01 November 1989
..., was “discovered” to be a serious problem of health during the last half of the nineteenth century. The next question is: how pervasive was beriberi in Brazil before that discovery? The answer would seem to be that it was quite pervasive, for there are numerous glimpses of the disease through the mist of a still...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2019) 99 (1): 1–30.
Published: 01 February 2019
..., covered their mouths and noses, burned incense, and misted the air with aromatic perfumes. Olfactory history, or how Limeños perceived these smells, falls within the larger field of sensory history, an approach that analyzes the ephemeral world of smells, sounds, tastes, and sensations. The concept...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2013) 93 (4): 621–657.
Published: 01 November 2013
... race are pushing you into or choose dignity and betterment when following the path of peace and fraternal association with the blancos, who have always looked out for your well-being.” 90 In other words, he called for workers to recognize and follow the established autono-mist leadership...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2002) 82 (1): 33–68.
Published: 01 February 2002
... Mexico hiding behind the façade of the image, waiting to emerge, pristine and untouched, from the primordial mists. 98 It was, in fact, the very search for such fixed essences that proved so critical to defining the nation-state. In this sense, García Cubas’s carta general was the broadest of a whole...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2010) 90 (3): 455–488.
Published: 01 August 2010
... law had continued after independence. Besides the case of the University of Córdoba mentioned above, the jurisprudence department of the University of Buenos Aires, created in 1821, “spent its first thirty years completely devoted to natural law,” which briefly coexisted with Bentha-mist influence...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2005) 85 (4): 555–593.
Published: 01 November 2005
... and of the human body. See Miguel León-Portilla, Aztec Thought and Culture , trans. Jack Emory Davis (Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 1963), 42. 46 López Austin notes that all sexual activity related to disease and death. See his Tamoanchan, Tlalocan: Places of Mist , trans. Bernard R. Ortiz de...
FIGURES | View All (4)