Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Heinrich Hössli (Glarona, 6 de agosto de 1784 — Winterthur, 24 de dezembro de 1864) foi um chapeleiro, decorador e escritor suíço. É autor do livro Eros - Die Männerliebe der Griechen, uma das primeira obras publicadas a defender o amor entre homens.

  2. Heinrich Hössli (6 August 1784 – 24 December 1864), sometimes written as Hößli, was a Swiss hatter and author. His book Eros Die Männerliebe der Griechen (2 vols., 1836, 1838) surveyed references to same-sex love in ancient Greek literature and more recent research, and was one of the first works in the 19th century that ...

  3. Heinrich Hössli (Glaris, 6 de agosto de 1784 - Winterthur, 24 de diciembre de 1864) fue un escritor suizo, considerado el primer verdadero militante del movimiento de liberación homosexual, cuyo surgimiento se hace remontar simbólicamente a la publicación de su obra Eros (1836), una defensa del amor entre hombres.

  4. Heinrich Hössli (* 6. August 1784 in Glarus; † 24. Dezember 1864 in Winterthur, auch Hößli oder Hösli geschrieben) war ein Schweizer Putzmacher, Tuchhändler und Schriftsteller. Er schrieb mit Eros. Die Männerliebe der Griechen die erste wichtige Verteidigung der Homosexualität .

  5. 10 de mai. de 2010 · The work of Heinrich Hössli (1784–1864) is a prime example of this demonstrative-subversive classical reception practice. Hössli was a Swiss milliner who had received no formal education but had learned his father’s trade of hat-making in Berne and then returned to his native town of Glarus.

    • Sebastian Matzner
    • 2010
  6. Heinrich Hössli (Glarona, 6 de agosto de 1784 — Winterthur, 24 de dezembro de 1864) foi um chapeleiro, decorador e escritor suíço. É autor do livro Eros - Die Männerliebe der Griechen, uma das primeira obras publicadas a defender o amor entre homens.

  7. The sexual theorists who championed a science of love were Ulrichs, Symonds, and Heinrich Hössli. In contrast to the modernist science of Agape, the epistemic patterns of mainstream sexual science imitated the broader codes and social realities of nineteenth-century bourgeois gender relations.