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Secrets of the Painter
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 148

Secrets of the Painter

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2002
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  • Publisher: iUniverse

None

From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 378

From Rainforest to Cane Field in Cuba

In this award-winning environmental history of Cuba since the age of Columbus, Reinaldo Funes Monzote emphasizes the two processes that have had the most dramatic impact on the island's landscape: deforestation and sugar cultivation. During the first 300 years of Spanish settlement, sugar plantations arose primarily in areas where forests had been cleared by the royal navy, which maintained an interest in management and conservation for the shipbuilding industry. The sugar planters won a decisive victory in 1815, however, when they were allowed to clear extensive forests, without restriction, for cane fields and sugar production. This book is the first to consider Cuba's vital sugar industry...

Wood, Trade, and Spanish Naval Power (c.1740-1795)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 277

Wood, Trade, and Spanish Naval Power (c.1740-1795)

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2024-06-11
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  • Publisher: BRILL

By focussing on timber sourcing, this book sheds light on the exploitation of forests in settings outside the Iberian Peninsula, including foreign states in the southern Baltic region and the colonial territory of New Spain between the c.1740-1795. Analysis of contracts, projects, and their implementation by the Spanish crown in the 18th century allow for a better understanding of the position of the Spanish monarchy’s nearly global efforts to sustain its naval commitments in the Atlantic World.

Barcelona: An Urban History of Science and Modernity, 1888-1929
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 258

Barcelona: An Urban History of Science and Modernity, 1888-1929

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-04-14
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  • Publisher: Routledge

The four decades between the two Universal Exhibitions of 1888 and 1929 were formative in the creation of modern Barcelona. Architecture and art blossomed in the work of Antoni Gaudi­ and many others. At the same time, social unrest tore the city apart. Topics such as art nouveau and anarchism have attracted the attention of numerous historians. Yet the crucial role of science, technology and medicine in the cultural makeup of the city has been largely ignored. The ten articles of this book recover the richness and complexity of the scientific culture of end of the century Barcelona. The authors explore a broad range of topics: zoological gardens, natural history museums, amusement parks, n...

Nature, Culture, and Race in Colonial Cuba
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 198

Nature, Culture, and Race in Colonial Cuba

A new and necessary examination of how nineteenth-century Cuban white elites viewed the natural world, material culture, and political power as intertwined In the decades before the Cuban wars of independence, white elites exploited the island’s natural history and culture to redefine racial identity and reassert authority. These practices occurred in the face of challenges to their political power from Cubans of mixed race and as Cuba’s dependence on sugar led to ecological and economic precarity. Lee Sessions uses close visual analysis to investigate how white elites wielded power by manipulating material culture, placing in conversation for the first time the natural history museums, botanical gardens, and thousands of paintings, drawings, and prints produced in and about Cuba from 1820 to 1860. This important and novel book explores how groups used material culture to imagine their own future at a moment when racial and political dynamics were changing rapidly, while facing an ecological disaster of unimaginable scale.

How the Spanish Empire Was Built
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 490

How the Spanish Empire Was Built

The untold story of the engineering behind the empire, showing how imperial Spain built upon existing infrastructure and hierarchies of the Inca, Aztec, and more, to further its growth. Sixteenth-century Spain was small, poor, disunited, and sparsely populated. Yet the Spaniards and their allies built the largest empire the world had ever seen. How did they achieve this? Felipe Fernández-Armesto and Manuel Lucena Giraldo argue that Spain’s engineers were critical to this venture. The Spanish invested in infrastructure to the advantage of local power brokers, enhancing the abilities of incumbent elites to grow wealthy on trade, and widening the arc of Spanish influence. Bringing to life stories of engineers, prospectors, soldiers, and priests, the authors paint a vivid portrait of Spanish America in the age of conquest. This is a dazzling new history of the Spanish Empire, and a new understanding of empire itself, as a venture marked as much by collaboration as oppression.

Sites of Violence and Memory in Modern Spain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 232

Sites of Violence and Memory in Modern Spain

In this sophisticated study, Antonio Míguez Macho and his team of expert scholars explore the connections between violence and memory in modern Spain. Most importantly for a nation with an uncomfortable relationship with its own past, this book reveals how sites of violence also became sites of forgetting. Centred around places of violence such as concentration camps and military courts where prisoners endured horrific forced labour and were sentenced to death, this book looks at how and why the history of these sites were obscured. Issues addressed include: how Guernica came to represent Francoist front-line brutality and so concealed violence behind the lines; the need to preserve drawing...

Spanish Artists from the Fourth to the Twentieth Century
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 480

Spanish Artists from the Fourth to the Twentieth Century

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1993
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Spanish Artists from the Fourth to the Twentieth Century: General bibliography and indexes
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 612
Horacio Capel, geógrafo
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 676

Horacio Capel, geógrafo

No son pocos los maestros que dejan una impronta indeleble en sus alumnos y ;colaboradores, tanto por la orientación ideológica con la que se enfrentan a su magisterio como por la contribución decisiva a la formación humana de sus discípulos. La carrera del profesor Horacio Capel es, como revela la presente miscelánea, un modelo y un referente para la Universidad de Barcelona. A la luz de las líneas de investigación que ha desarrollado a lo largo de su trayectoria, sus colegas y discípulos han concebido un libro que, como las obras del propio Capel, está llamado a convertirse en un manual de referencia y en una recomendación bibliográfica inexcusable para los estudios de geografía urbana y teoría de la geografía, ámbitos en los que destacan las perspectivas significativamente innovadoras a nivel internacional aportadas por el homenajeado.