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bourgeoi

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Journal Article
Radical History Review (1977) 1977 (14-15): 36–59.
Published: 01 May 1977
...Elizabeth Fox-Genovese 1977 Property and Patriarchy in Classical Bourgeois Political Theory Elizabeth Fox-Genovese Locke fell into a swoon, The garden died. God took the spinning jenny Out...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2012) 2012 (114): 91–112.
Published: 01 October 2012
...Eva Giloi As Germany's cities ballooned in size in the late nineteenth century, new urban technologies expanded the mobility of modern urbanites — except for bourgeois boys. With city neighborhoods taken over by traffic, increasing the danger of injury to children playing in the streets, middle...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2012) 2012 (114): 39–65.
Published: 01 October 2012
... value of properties. Local business owners — “petit bourgeois” capitalists — had no means to draw on the “geographic” vision of the urban city planner. Carving new shortcuts through buildings and between streets, constructing sidewalks and passages couverts , they nevertheless reinterpreted the built...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2004) 2004 (88): 49–51.
Published: 01 January 2004
...James Oakes 2004 by MARHO: The Radical Historians' Organization,Inc. 2004 05-Oakes 12/2/03 3:24 PM Page 49 GENOVESE FORUM The Sixth Element James Oakes Jim Livingston argues that bourgeois individualism is compatible...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1986) 1986 (34): 87–99.
Published: 01 January 1986
... of German His- tory: Bourgeois Society and Politics in Nineteenth-Century Germany (Ox- ford Univ. Press, 1984), viii + 300 pp. $25.95 and $10.95. Just as ancient people have lived their previous history in imagination, in mythology, so we Germans have lived our fu- ture history...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1993) 1993 (57): 116–159.
Published: 01 October 1993
... is a relatively new subject of study for historians of the European middle classes. For a long time, it was neglected by scholars who were preoccupied with the bourgeois as capitalist. More recently, however, new research has sketched portraits of the bourgeoisie, which are richer in detail and more...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1993) 1993 (57): 117–159.
Published: 01 October 1993
... is a relatively new subject of study for historians of the European middle classes. For a long time, it was neglected by scholars who were preoccupied with the bourgeois as capitalist. More recently, however, new research has sketched portraits of the bourgeoisie, which are richer in detail and more...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1984) 1984 (28-30): 445–463.
Published: 01 May 1984
... Kautsky and even further back to the moral sciences propounded by nineteenth- century bourgeois philanthropists. RanciGre read Althusser in such a way as to show that where Althusser gave primacy to the party and to theory, he could be shown to presuppose the creative action of workers...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2004) 2004 (88): 30–48.
Published: 01 January 2004
..., the negation of “bourgeois individualism” (as he would have it), market society, and capitalist culture enunciated by slaveholders and embedded in the “Southern Tradition.” Genovese’s life’s work is soon to be consummated in The Mind of the Master...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1979) 1979 (20): 53–58.
Published: 01 May 1979
... of bourgeois femininity the objects of soldierly affection are treated as sexually neutralized sisters and mothers. In contrast to the red nurse, the white nurse truly merited the name Krankenschwester (literally, "sister of the sick "Never," wrote Captain von Medem describing the occupation of Riga...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1977) 1977 (13): 94–114.
Published: 01 January 1977
...-celebration and quibbling which mars such effforts in most bourgeois journals; accordingly, I shall do my best to hold down the urge to defend myself against that which our bourgeois colleagues, unaccustomed to the rough polemical style of our movement, like to think as "attacks." May I, however...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1995) 1995 (61): 175–183.
Published: 01 January 1995
... and their competence which meant that they had earned political recognition” (161). By linking political representation to economic productivity and the marketplace, bourgeois men wrote women out of public political and economic concerns. Many women, of course, cared about political issues including anti-Slav...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1987) 1987 (38): 59–71.
Published: 01 May 1987
... of Modern Life (Knopf, 1985). More than a decade ago, two books by T. J. Clark, Image of the People and The Absolute Bourgeois (1973), played a vital role in helping to revive (and in a real sense to create anew) what became known as the "social history of art." The publication of his first...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1980) 1980 (24): 161–176.
Published: 01 October 1980
... to result in either fascism or revolutionary socialism. Workers would be radicalized and launch attacks to which monopoly capital, already desperate, could only respond with violence at home and abroad. This quantitative increase in violence represented the movement from bourgeois democracy...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1984) 1984 (28-30): 45–65.
Published: 01 May 1984
... of the century were suspicious of tax collectors and military recruiters, but also of bourgeois reformers who appeared to scorn their ways. A minority, mostly of artisanal status, had made a definitive political commitment during the Revolution FRENCH SOCIAL HISTORY 47...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2006) 2006 (94): 233–239.
Published: 01 January 2006
... and disability studies as a subdiscipline have little to offer a history of Victorian invalid- ism; and second, working-class men and women did not share or participate in the culture of invalidism, except presumably through the invisible caregiving labor they provided bourgeois men and women. Can...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1987) 1987 (38): 38–58.
Published: 01 May 1987
.... For Duncan and Wallach, “the sudden flowering of art museums all over Europe in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries testifies to the bourgeoisie’s growing social and political power. ” The museum, in this view, serves to “institutionalize the bourgeois claim to speak...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1984) 1984 (31): 5–21.
Published: 01 December 1984
... of the form of -the writing as well as the content, >Tax's and DeMarco's limitations eluci- date the dilemma of the narrativk voice--the Scylla of the modernist novel's isolated voice and the Charybdis of the nineteenth-century bourgeois novel's omniscient voice, if I might...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1993) 1993 (57): 250–257.
Published: 01 October 1993
... in terms of the "strength" of these countries' national states-the size, breadth, and longevity of their bureaucracies-and the possibilities for or- ganizing in civil society (by bourgeois women, among others) that emerged when states were weak. Particularly in the U.S., their work suggests...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1993) 1993 (57): 98–115.
Published: 01 October 1993
... philological training. Stretched across the canvas of nearly three millennia of Western cultural history, Mimesis portrayed the gradual emergence, the rise to dominance, and the recent decline of European bourgeois society as this was depicted and realized in literary representations from...