scholarly journals John Kirkup, The evolution of surgical instruments: an illustrated history from ancient times to the twentieth century, Novato, CA, Norman Publishing, 2006, pp. xviii, 510, 30 colour illus., 527 black and white illus., $275.00 (hardback 0-930405-86-2). - John Kirkup, A history of limb amputation, Heidelberg, Springer, 2007, pp vii,184, illus., £100.00, €149.95, $169.00 (hardback 978-1-84628-443-4).

2010 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-142
Author(s):  
Stephanie J Snow
2015 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 557-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel Cabrita

AbstractThis article analyses the intersection between cosmopolitanism and racist ideologies in the faith healing practices of the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church in Zion. Originally from Illinois, USA, this organization was the period's most influential divine healing group. Black and white members, under the leadership of the charismatic John Alexander Dowie, eschewed medical assistance and proclaimed God's power to heal physical affliction. In affirming the deity's capacity to remake human bodies, church members also insisted that God could refashion biological race into a capacious spiritual ethnicity: a global human race they referred to as the “Adamic” race. Zionist universalist teachings were adopted by dispossessed and newly urbanized Boer ex-farmers in Johannesburg, Transvaal, before spreading to the soldiers of the British regiments recently arrived to fight the Boer states in the war of 1899–1902. Zionism equipped these estranged white “races” with a vocabulary to articulate political reconciliation and a precarious unity. But divine healing was most enthusiastically received among the Transvaal's rural Africans. Amidst the period's hardening segregation, Africans seized upon divine healing's innovative racial teachings, but both Boers and Africans found disappointment amid Zion's cosmopolitan promises. Boers were marginalized within the new racial regimes of the Edwardian empire in South Africa, and white South Africans had always been ambivalent about divine healing's incorporations of black Africans into a unitary race. This early history of Zionism in the Transvaal reveals the constriction of cosmopolitan aspirations amidst fast-narrowing horizons of race, nation, and empire in early twentieth-century South Africa.


Author(s):  
John Obert Voll

This article describes the role of the Middle East in world history. The Middle East is both a strategic concept and a geo-cultural region. As a concept and a specific label of identification, it is a product of analysts writing about twentieth-century world affairs. However, as a region, its peoples and cultures are associated with the history of humanity from ancient times. This regional name itself shapes a way of understanding the history of the broad region of Southwestern Asia and Northern Africa. Both of the terms in the name — ‘Middle’ and ‘East’ — identify the region in relationship to other world regions and reflect the importance of the region's involvement in broader global historical processes. Along with examining the history of the region, the discussion also notes how the concepts of the historical units involved in that history have changed in the presentations of the history of the Middle East.


2002 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 21-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeanette Zaichkin ◽  
Thomas Wiswell

Attempts at human resuscitation date back to ancient times. Most strategies for resuscitation focused on adults until the early 1800s, when newborn resuscitation captured the interest of noted practitioners. The most promising techniques and strategies for neonatal resuscitation were developed during the latter part of the twentieth century. This article examines the key components of neonatal resuscitation and the discoveries that stimulated the development of current neonatal resuscitation practices.


Author(s):  
Yasser Abdullah Al-Thubaiti

The article aimed to clarify the history of Arab and Muslim mathematicians and to clarify the most important scientific achievements that played an active role in the development of mathematics. The descriptive research was followed through research in scientific encyclopedias such as the Encyclopedia of Mathematics and related scientific references. The history of mathematicians from ancient times to the twentieth century was studied and the most important mathematicians who had clear and documented scientific achievements were emphasized. The article concluded that there is a great role for the Arab and Muslim scientists in establishing the mathematics of this age, which expressed complex and logical relations, and provided us with a framework to regulate the large amounts of information and data by computer. The researchers recommended the need to document the work of Arab and Muslim scientists in scientific encyclopedias in various fields .


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