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  1. Hirstein, James, éd. Beatus Rhenanus (1485–1547) et une réforme de l’Eglise : Engagement et changement. Actes du colloque international tenu à Strasbourg et à Sélestat du 5 au 6 juin 2015
  2. Historical Notes on the Architecture of Italian Confraternities

    Historical Notes on the Architecture of Italian Confraternities

    Article | Contributor(s): Francesco Lucantoni

    Historians of architecture have always drawn a distinct line between civic and religious architecture. Although this separation allows for easier classification of the vast heritage of architecture, it is not adequate for analysing certain realities that, by their very nature, fall between the...

  3. Historical Topography and British History in Camden's Britannia

    Historical Topography and British History in Camden's Britannia

    Article | Contributor(s): William Rockett

  4. Historiographic Metafiction: P.M. Pasinetti's Melodramma

    Historiographic Metafiction: P.M. Pasinetti's Melodramma

    Article | Contributor(s): Cristina Della Coletta

  5. History and the Epic Discourse: Remarks on the Narrative Structure of Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata

    History and the Epic Discourse: Remarks on the Narrative Structure of Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata

    2023-05-04 22:05:17 | Article | Contributor(s): Dante Della Terza

  6. Hock, Jessie. The Erotics of Materialism: Lucretius and Early Modern Poetics.
  7. Holtz, Grégoire, Jean-Claude Laborie et Frank Lestringant, éds. Voyageurs de la Renaissance.
  8. Holtzmann's Law in a Southeastern Italian Dialect

    Holtzmann's Law in a Southeastern Italian Dialect

    Article | Contributor(s): Terry B. Cox

  9. Holy Dying in Richard II

    Holy Dying in Richard II

    Article | Contributor(s): Robert M. Schuler

    Dans le Richard II de Shakespeare, 2ième acte, scène 1, le roi Richard assiste à l’agonie de John of Gaunt, considéré—selon les termes de la théorie politique des Tudor—autant comme monarque sacerdotal de droit divin (dans son corps politique) que comme parent (dans son corps naturel). Ces deux...

  10. Honig, Elizabeth Alice. Pieter Bruegel and the Idea of Human Nature
  11. Honouring the grandmothers through (re)membering, (re)learning, and (re)vitalizing Métis traditional foods and protocols

    Honouring the grandmothers through (re)membering, (re)learning, and (re)vitalizing Métis traditional foods and protocols

    2025-03-19 22:03:30 | Article | Contributor(s): Monica Cyr, Joyce Slater | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v6i2.339

    In Canada, Métis cultural restoration continues to advance. Food practices and protocols, from the vantage point of Métis women who were traditionally responsible for domestic work, qualify as important subjects worthy of study because food and food work are integral components of family...

  12. Hooks, Adam G., and Zachary Lesser, project leads. Shakespeare Census; Stapleton, Michael, project lead. SHAKEDSETC.ORG. Other
  13. Horbury, Ezra. Prodigality in Early Modern Drama.

    Horbury, Ezra. Prodigality in Early Modern Drama.

    Article | Contributor(s): Dan Breen

  14. Hornbeck II, J. Patrick. Remembering Wolsey: A History of Commemorations and Representations
  15. Hosington, Brenda M., gen ed. Renaissance Cultural Crossroads Catalogue (RCCC). Database
  16. Houghton, L. B. T., and Marco Sgarbi, eds. Virgil and Renaissance Culture
  17. How Archbishop Spottiswoode Became an Episcopalian

    How Archbishop Spottiswoode Became an Episcopalian

    Article | Contributor(s): Julian Goodare

    L'archevêque John Spottiswoode (1565–1639) était le plus éminent épiscopalien d'Écosse. Toutefois, au début de sa carrière il était fermement presbytérien. Cette étude montre quand et comment ce changement s'est opéré. L'événement au coeur de ce changement est une tentative de « coup d'état »...

  18. How Can We Broaden and Diversify Humanities Knowledge Translation?

    How Can We Broaden and Diversify Humanities Knowledge Translation?

    2022-06-23 20:42:20 | Article | Contributor(s): Alyssa Arbuckle | https://doi.org/10.25547/G047-4735

    Knowledge Translation

  19. How Canadians Communicate VI: Food Promotion, Consumption, and Controversy by Charlene Elliott (Ed.)

    How Canadians Communicate VI: Food Promotion, Consumption, and Controversy by Charlene Elliott (Ed.)

    2025-03-19 22:03:45 | Review | Contributor(s): Kathy Dobson, Fleur Esteron, Irena Knezevic, Agnes Malkinson, Scott Mitchell, Andrea Noriega, Chloe Poitevin DesRivieres, Julie Pasho, Antonella Pucci | https://doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v3i2.182

    Elliott’s collection brings communication studies to the core of food studies, and this makes it a long-overdue book. While not all authors are communication scholars, the range of topics covered in the book are representative of how enmeshed the study of food and the study of human...

  20. How do you wish to be cited? Citation practices and a scholarly community of care in trans studies research articles

    How do you wish to be cited? Citation practices and a scholarly community of care in trans studies research articles

    2025-05-27 00:00:22 | Article | Contributor(s): Katja Thieme, Mary Ann S. Saunders | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2018.03.010

    citation, trans studies, gender studies, research writing, academic writing, embodied knowledge, pragmatics