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A Revista de História das Ideias esteve associada, desde a sua fundação, ao Instituto de História e Teoria das Ideias. O seu lugar e o seu papel no campo da história intelectual e da história da cultura é reconhecido por um vasto conjunto de colaboradores, autores, consultores científicos e leitores que, com manifesta dedicação e empenho, reclamam a sua publicação. No aprofundamento do diálogo da História com outras áreas das Ciências Humanas e Sociais, a Revista retoma o seu desígnio inicial de tratamento de questões teórico-metodológicas e inscreve a perspetiva comparatista em História das Ideias no terreno de uma sólida internacionalização da produção historiográfica. Com este propósito, recupera e reatualiza a inestimável herança do seu fundador, o Professor José Sebastião da Silva Dias.
A Revista de História das Ideias esteve associada, desde a sua fundação, ao Instituto de História e Teoria das Ideias. O seu lugar e o seu papel no campo da história intelectual e da história da cultura é reconhecido por um vasto conjunto de colaboradores, autores, consultores científicos e leitores que, com manifesta dedicação e empenho, reclamam a sua publicação. No aprofundamento do diálogo da História com outras áreas das Ciências Humanas e Sociais, a Revista retoma o seu desígnio inicial de tratamento de questões teórico-metodológicas e inscreve a perspetiva comparatista em História das Ideias no terreno de uma sólida internacionalização da produção historiográfica. Com este propósito, recupera e reatualiza a inestimável herança do seu fundador, o Professor José Sebastião da Silva Dias.
Kurzman proposes that the collective agent most directly responsible for democratization was the emerging class of modern intellectuals, a group that had gained a global identity and a near-messianic sense of mission following the Dreyfus Affair of 1898. Each chapter of this book focuses on a single angle of this story, covering all six cases by examining newspaper accounts, memoirs, and government reports.
These proceedings represent the work of contributors to the 7th International Conference on Tourism Research (ICTR 2024), hosted by the Centre for Tourism Research in Africa at the Cape Town Hotel School, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa on 18-19 March 2024. The Conference Chair is Prof Rishi Balkaran and the Programme Chair is Dr Chris Hattingh, both from Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT), South Africa. ICTR is a well-established event on the academic research calendar and now in its 7th year the key aim remains the opportunity for participants to share ideas and meet the people who hold them. The scope of papers will ensure an interesting two days. The subjects covered illustrate the wide range of topics that fall into this important and ever-growing area of research. Today, more than ever, there is a need for research and scientific guidance as the tourist sector struggles to cope with the consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic, inflation, socio-political turbulences, climate change and disaster risk.
In Permanent Transit: Discourses and Maps of the Intercultural Experience builds interdisciplinary approaches to the study of migrations, traffics, globalisation, communication, regulations, arts, literature, and other intercultural processes, in the context of past and present times. The book offers a convergence of perspectives, combining conceptual and empirical work by sociologists, anthropologists, historians, linguists, educators, lawyers, media specialists, and literary studies writers, in their shared attempt to understand the many routes of the intercultural experience. This Permanent Transit generates an overlapping of cultures, characteristic of a site of cultural translation. In their incessant creation of uncertainties, these pages also produce new hypotheses, theories and explanations, while pushing limits, bringing about epistemological changes, and opening new spaces for independent discussion and research. The potential for change is located at peripheries marked by hybridity, where the ‘new arrivals’ and the ‘excluded’ – like this book and many of its contributors – are able to use subversion to undermine the strategies of the powerful, regardless of who they are. Cultural translation – both as Judith Butler’s ‘return of the excluded’ and as Homi Bhabha’s hybridity – is a major force of contemporary democracy, also in the academic field.
This groundbreaking monograph explores the fascinating social context of "witchcraft" trials in Portugal during the long eighteenth century, when conventional medical practitioners, motivated by a desire to promote "scientific" medicine, worked within the Holy Office to prosecute superstitious folk healers.