Medical reports on fevers and epidemics are an interesting research field for investigating eighteenth-century medical language. The works under scrutiny here are focused on epidemic outbreaks which were widespread especially in large and medium towns. They provide linguistic evidence for the many processes of denomination and lexicalisation of diseases, and the lexicalisation of related notions (e.g. contagion and infection), ideas (e.g. environment and social groups), and values (e.g. public health, prevention, poverty and wealth). Starting from the two keywords fever/s and epidemic/s, the aim of this study is to analyse a set of texts published in the British Isles in the last thirty years of the century and referring to contemporary eve...
The influenza pandemic of 1889 was the first truly global flu outbreak in scope. Characterised by hi...
While intensifiers are primarily associated with informal spoken registers, they serve important int...
This thesis explores the socio-cultural construction of disease between approximately 1510 and 1620...
Medical reports on fevers and epidemics are an interesting research field for investigating eighteen...
The term which is at the heart of the investigation is fever(s) both as a single-word lexeme and as ...
During the 18th-century, the advances in medicine as well as a growing awareness of health issues fa...
International audienceResearch on the second plague pandemic that swept over Europe from the fourtee...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
The methods of preventing and controlling plagues depended heavily on contemporary understandings of...
This thesis examines concepts of disease existing in the Anglo-Saxon period. The focus is in particu...
This analysis of 18th century plagues stresses the importance of a discursive approach to the analys...
Mental health in epidemic periods is a recurrent theme, as well as epidemics themselves. Based on an...
It often happens that terms defined by dictionaries as synonyms have different patterns of use. An e...
The influenza pandemic of 1889 was the first truly global flu outbreak in scope. Characterised by hi...
While intensifiers are primarily associated with informal spoken registers, they serve important int...
This thesis explores the socio-cultural construction of disease between approximately 1510 and 1620...
Medical reports on fevers and epidemics are an interesting research field for investigating eighteen...
The term which is at the heart of the investigation is fever(s) both as a single-word lexeme and as ...
During the 18th-century, the advances in medicine as well as a growing awareness of health issues fa...
International audienceResearch on the second plague pandemic that swept over Europe from the fourtee...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
The methods of preventing and controlling plagues depended heavily on contemporary understandings of...
This thesis examines concepts of disease existing in the Anglo-Saxon period. The focus is in particu...
This analysis of 18th century plagues stresses the importance of a discursive approach to the analys...
Mental health in epidemic periods is a recurrent theme, as well as epidemics themselves. Based on an...
It often happens that terms defined by dictionaries as synonyms have different patterns of use. An e...
The influenza pandemic of 1889 was the first truly global flu outbreak in scope. Characterised by hi...
While intensifiers are primarily associated with informal spoken registers, they serve important int...
This thesis explores the socio-cultural construction of disease between approximately 1510 and 1620...