Listing 1 - 10 of 1657 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
A tendência dos estudos do século xxi sobre a mesa tem sido de privilegiar as abordagens multi- e transdisciplinares. Aliás é na sua aceção holística que usamos o termo mesa, universo que engloba bens, pessoas e ideias. Reflect hoje sobre a mesa constitui um processo de indagação atento a três dos principais pilares da relação do homem com o alimento, ao longo de toda a sua história: alimentação, saúde e cultura. A presente obra tem por tema as Mesas Luso-brasileiras e está organized em owe volumes, contendo cinco partes e um total de 25 capítulos.Os 13 capítulos que encabeçam o primeiro volume focam em owe temas centrais: o alimento sob o prisma terapêutico e simbólico . Na Parte I (Mesas Terapêuticas: quando o alimento é medicamento), evidence-se o fato de que, historicamente, os escritos médicos precederam a literatura culinária.
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Choose an application
Islam --- Addresses, essays, lectures. --- Essays --- Essays.
Choose an application
Choose an application
The appearance of the first issue of The Tatler in 1709 is usually regarded as the beginning of periodical publication in England. Its founder, Richard Steele (1672-1729), intended 'a paper, which should observe upon the manners of the pleasurable, as well as the busy part of mankind ... by way of a letter of intelligence, consisting of such parts as might gratify the curiosity of persons of all conditions, and of each sex'. The 'datelines' of the reports, on news, literature, and plain gossip, were from the most famous coffee houses of early Georgian London, and the contributors included Jonathan Swift and Joseph Addison. The magazine was published for only two years, from April 1709 to January 1711: shortly afterwards, Steele and Addison co-founded The Spectator. This four-volume edition was issued in 1797 by a consortium of publishers, including John Nichols. Volume 1 contains the first fifty numbers.
Choose an application
The appearance of the first issue of The Tatler in 1709 is usually regarded as the beginning of periodical publication in England. Its founder, Richard Steele (1672-1729), intended 'a paper, which should observe upon the manners of the pleasurable, as well as the busy part of mankind ... by way of a letter of intelligence, consisting of such parts as might gratify the curiosity of persons of all conditions, and of each sex'. The 'datelines' of the reports, on news, literature, and plain gossip, were from the most famous coffee houses of early Georgian London, and the contributors included Jonathan Swift and Joseph Addison. The magazine was published for only two years, from April 1709 to January 1711: shortly afterwards, Steele and Addison co-founded The Spectator. This four-volume edition was issued in 1797 by a consortium of publishers, including John Nichols. Volume 4 contains numbers 190 to 271.
Listing 1 - 10 of 1657 | << page >> |
Sort by
|