Search Results - "Reformation"
Suggested Topics within your search.
Suggested Topics within your search.
- Aestheticism (Literature)
- Aesthetics 2
- Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment 2
- Art 2
- Art and literature
- Art et litterature 2
- Aspect social 2
- Beauty 2
- Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms 2
- Communicable Disease Control 2
- Delivery of Health Care
- Disciplines and Occupations 2
- Englisch 2
- English 2
- English Literature 2
- English literature 2
- English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
- Environment and Public Health 2
- Environmental Health 2
- Environmental health
- Esthetics 2
- Esthetique 2
- Esthetisme (Litterature)
- European 2
- Gesundheitswesen 2
- Health Occupations 2
- Health Personnel 2
- Health Workforce 2
- Histoire
- Histoire et critique 2
-
1
The Sanitary Arts : Aesthetic Culture and the Victorian Cleanliness Campaigns
Published 2014Table of Contents: “…Foul matter: Edwin Chadwick; John Ruskin, and mid-Victorian Aesthesis -- Dirty pictures: John Ruskin, Modern Painters, and Victorian Sanitation of Fine Art -- The Sanitary narrative: Victorian reform fiction and the putresence of the picturesque -- Victorian dust traps -- The surgical arts: aesthesia and anaesthesia in late-Victorian medical fiction -- Aesthetic anachronisms: Mary Ward's The Mating of Lydia and the persistent plot of sanitary fiction -- Intensive culture: John Ruskin, Sarah Grand, and the aesthetics of eugenics -- On methods, materials, and meaning.…”
Full text available:
Electronic eBook -
2
The Sanitary Arts : Aesthetic Culture and the Victorian Cleanliness Campaigns
Published 2014Table of Contents: “…Foul matter: Edwin Chadwick; John Ruskin, and mid-Victorian Aesthesis -- Dirty pictures: John Ruskin, Modern Painters, and Victorian Sanitation of Fine Art -- The Sanitary narrative: Victorian reform fiction and the putresence of the picturesque -- Victorian dust traps -- The surgical arts: aesthesia and anaesthesia in late-Victorian medical fiction -- Aesthetic anachronisms: Mary Ward's The Mating of Lydia and the persistent plot of sanitary fiction -- Intensive culture: John Ruskin, Sarah Grand, and the aesthetics of eugenics -- On methods, materials, and meaning.…”
Full text available:
Electronic eBook