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Travel is a powerful force in shaping the perception of the modern world and plays an ever-growing role within architectural and urban cultures. Inextricably linked to political and ideological issues, travel redefines places and landscapes through new transport infrastructures and buildings. Architecture, in turn, is reconstructed through visual and textual narratives produced by scores of modern travellers — including writers and artists along with architects themselves. In the age of the camera, travel is bound up with new kinds of imaginaries; private records and recollections often mingle with official, stereotyped views, as the value of architectural heritage increasingly rests on the mechanical reproduction of its images. Whilst students often learn about architectural history through image collections, the place of the journey in the formation of the architect itself shifts. No longer a lone and passionate antiquarian or an itinerant designer, the modern architect eagerly hops on buses, trains, and planes in pursuit of personal as well as professional interests. Increasingly built on a presumption of mobility, architectural culture integrates travel into cultural debates and design experiments. By addressing such issues from a variety of perspectives, this collection, a special Architectural Histories issue on travel, prompts us to rethink the mobile conditions in which architecture has historically been produced and received.
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Travel is a powerful force in shaping the perception of the modern world and plays an ever-growing role within architectural and urban cultures. Inextricably linked to political and ideological issues, travel redefines places and landscapes through new transport infrastructures and buildings. Architecture, in turn, is reconstructed through visual and textual narratives produced by scores of modern travellers — including writers and artists along with architects themselves. In the age of the camera, travel is bound up with new kinds of imaginaries; private records and recollections often mingle with official, stereotyped views, as the value of architectural heritage increasingly rests on the mechanical reproduction of its images. Whilst students often learn about architectural history through image collections, the place of the journey in the formation of the architect itself shifts. No longer a lone and passionate antiquarian or an itinerant designer, the modern architect eagerly hops on buses, trains, and planes in pursuit of personal as well as professional interests. Increasingly built on a presumption of mobility, architectural culture integrates travel into cultural debates and design experiments. By addressing such issues from a variety of perspectives, this collection, a special Architectural Histories issue on travel, prompts us to rethink the mobile conditions in which architecture has historically been produced and received.
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9781440835513_Volume_1 -- Cover page -- Halftitle page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Early Civilizations, 4000 bce to 1000 bce -- INTRODUCTION -- CHRONOLOGY -- Egypt, 4000 to 1000 bce -- Delta, Battle of, ca. 1175 bce -- The Khufu Vessels -- Punt, Expeditions to -- Sea Peoples -- The Uluburun Shipwreck -- The Aegean Sea, 4000 to 1000 bce -- Homer -- Knossos -- Mesopotamia, 4000 to 1000 bce -- Dilmun -- The Epic of Gilgamesh -- PRIMARY DOCUMENTS -- Epic of Gilgamesh, Tablet XI, ca. 2100 bce -- "The Shipwrecked Sailor," ca. 2000-1650 bce -- "Great Inscription of Year 8" and "Inscription Accompanying the Naval Battle," from Ramesses III's Mortuary Temple at Medinet Habu, ca. 1175 bce -- The Report of Wenamun, ca. 1189-1077 bce -- Homer, Odyssey, Book 5, lines 244-330, ca. 750-650 bce -- Chapter 2 The Ancient World, 1000 bce to 300 ce -- INTRODUCTION -- CHRONOLOGY -- China, 1000 bce to 300 ce -- Egypt, 1000 bce to 300 ce -- Alexandria -- Eudoxus of Cyzicus -- Ptolemy, Claudius, ca. 100-170 ce -- Greece, 1000 bce to 300 ce -- Herodotus, ca. 484-425 bce -- Piraeus -- Pytheas of Massalia, ca. 350 bce to ca. 285 bce -- Salamis, Battle of -- Syracusia -- Themistocles, ca. 524-23 to 460-59 bce -- Trireme -- India, 1000 bce to 300 ce -- Phoenicia and Carthage , 1000 bce to 300 ce -- Hanno the Navigator, Fifth and Sixth Centuries bce -- Rome, 1000 bce to 300 ce -- Actium, Battle of, 31 bce -- Piracy in the Mediterranean to 300 ce -- Punic Wars, 264-146 bce -- PRIMARY DOCUMENTS -- The Voyage of Hanno, ca. 600-400 bce -- Herodotus on Pharaoh Necho II, ca. 484-425 bce -- Julius Caesar Battles the Veneti, ca. 100-44 bce -- Excerpt from the Pattinapalai, ca. 100 bce-100 ce -- Strabo on Pytheas of Massalia, ca. 64 bce-24 ce -- Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, ca. 60 ce.
In: Journal of modern European history: Zeitschrift für moderne europäische Geschichte = Revue d'histoire européenne contemporaine, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 337-352
ISSN: 2631-9764
This article examines how women crossed local and national borders in order to obtain abortions despite laws and religious injunctions that forbade abortion. Investigating that travel reveals transnational networks of information and assistance among abortion providers, physicians, feminists, and others; it also makes visible how changing laws changed patterns of abortion travel. This article considers travelling for abortion from the 19th through the 21st century primarily by North Americans and Europeans who travelled across borders, oceans, and continents to many different countries around the world in order to obtain abortions.
BACKGROUND: The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) that first occurred in Wuhan, China, is currently spreading throughout China. The majority of infected patients either traveled to Wuhan or came into contact with an infected person from Wuhan. Investigating members of the public with a travel history to Wuhan became the primary focus of the Chinese government's epidemic prevention and control measures, but several instances of withheld histories were uncovered as localized clusters of infections broke out. This study investigated the public's willingness and beliefs associated with reporting travel history to high-risk epidemic regions, to provide effective suggestions and measures for encouraging travel reporting. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted online between February 12 and 19, 2020. Descriptive analysis, chi-squared test, and Fisher's exact test were used to identify socio-demographic factors and beliefs associated with reporting, as well as their impact on the willingness to report on travel history to high-risk epidemic regions. RESULTS: Of the 1344 respondents, 91 (6.77%) expressed an inclination to deliberately withhold travel history. Those who understood the benefits of reporting and the legal consequences for deliberately withholding information, showed greater willingness to report their history (P < 0.05); conversely, those who believed reporting would stigmatize them and feared being quarantined after reporting showed less willingness to report (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: As any incident of withheld history can have unpredictable outcomes, the proportion of people who deliberately withhold information deserves attention. Appropriate public risk communication and public advocacy strategies should be implemented to strengthen the understanding that reporting on travel history facilitates infection screening and prompt treatment, and to decrease the fear of potentially becoming quarantined after reporting. Additionally, social support and policies should be established, and ...
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World Affairs Online
In: Social studies: a periodical for teachers and administrators, Band 45, Heft 3, S. 101-104
ISSN: 2152-405X
In: Central Asian survey, Band 35, Heft 3, S. 466-468
ISSN: 1465-3354
In: Military Affairs, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 34
In: Historical perspectives on technology, society, and culture
The western ocean -- A new nation -- Seaways -- Canals -- An inland seacoast? -- Riverways -- Railways -- Highways -- Airways.
In: Current History, Band 46, Heft 4, S. 122-125
ISSN: 1944-785X