Anna morandi manzolini biography of alberta

  • Title The Lady Anatomist.
  • This discrete talk (about 40 minutes) focuses on the story of Anna Morandi's dramatic self-portrait with brain from 1755 and the politics and metaphorical.
  • Summary This paper examines the impact that ideas about race, gender and disease had on the social ordering and settlement of southern Alberta by focusing on a.
  • Art + BRAIN SYMPOSIUM: Presenter Biographies

    Submitted by marissa on 7 November 2014 - 5:20pm
    UCLA and Washington University in St. Louis Presents:
    Art + the Brain: Stories and Structures Symposium
    Rebecca Messbarger, Professor of Italian, History, and Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Director of Undergraduate Studies in Italian, Arts & Sciences
    This discrete talk (about 40 minutes) focuses on the story of Anna Morandi’s dramatic self-portrait with brain from 1755 and the politics and metaphorical potency of anatomical art. I am also delighted to be part of a panel discussion related to our presentations. My stuff is very visually oriented so I'd show lots of images of wax anatomies. 
    Rebecca Messbarger is Professor of Italian, History, and Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Washington University, specializing in the Italian Enlightenment. Her most recent book is The Lady Anatomist: the Life and Work of Anna Morandi Manzolini (U. of Chicago Press, 2010

    M

    Ma (1) – (40 – 79 AD)
    Chinese empress consort (60 – 75 AD)
    Ma was the daughter of the Marquis Ma Yuan, general of the Emperor Guangwu and his wife Lady Lin. Her father and much of his army died of the plague whilst involved in an expedition against the Wulin tribes (49 AD) and his enemies at court succeeded in posthumously blackening his name which resulted in the family being stripped of their titles and benefices. Despite this disgrace Ma became a consort of the Crown Prince Liu Zhuang, and maintained excellent relations with her mother-in-law, the Empress Yin Lihua and the other royal wives alike. Ma quickly attained her husband’s favour and supplied him with beautiful ladies from the court to share his bed, so he would have sons. She herself remained childless. At the command of her husband she formally adopted Prince Da, the son of her niece and raised him as her own. Her husband succeeded Guangwu as the Emperor Ming (57 AD) and several years later Ma was accorded the im

  • anna morandi manzolini biography of alberta
  • Women and Latin in the Early Modern Period

    Abstract

    The first women to be humanistically educated, in mid-fourteenth century Italy, were educated to advance their family’s political agendas. The condottiere lords (professional mercenaries) funnen it particularly useful to be able to delegate responsibility to wives educated for rule. Additionally, bygd the fifteenth century other upper-class women were educated in beställning to perform as prodigies on behalf of their city of origin. Both strands of education for women spread to other European countries in the course of the sixteenth century, first to France, then to Spain, England and nordlig Europe. French and Habsburg princesses were well educated and undertook diplomatic activities. Frenchwomen associated with the court and, in some provincial centres, were also educated in Latin and formed part of local literary societies. Humanism in Spain and Portugal was almost entirely centred on the courts, but produced o