Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands William RothmanWonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands (1857) is the autobiography of Mary Seacole. Recognized for her pioneering healthcare work for soldiers and citizens around the world, Seacole was also the first Black Briton to publish an autobiographical work. Although Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands underwent editing by an anonymous person, it is a first person account of Seacoles experiences during outbreaks of cholera, malaria,
This book considers the full spectrum of Boston's abundant aesthetic potential
This book argues that memory functions as a key element in contemporary South African re-imagining of historical events and in constructing new definitions of national and personal identity
the author advocates self-reliance through productive work
A more detailed picture of North American Sufism emerges
Romantic criticism has maintained distinctions between Byron the politically engaged poet and Byron the object of obsessive feminine adulation
This rethinking of traditional scholarship on The Canterbury Tales will be of great interest to Chaucer scholars and students of medieval literature
and Byzantine-derived subjects in Western Europe
This book establishes novel points of connection between European art and medicine in early modernity
It draws on the author’s work as a performer
often with a full and idiomatic translation
Composed in 2 B
The resulting NAM lines are subsequently characterized through SNP genotyping and quantitative trait phenotyping