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  1. The Development of Taxidermy and the History of Ornithology.Paul Lawrence Farber - 1977 - Isis 68 (4):550-566.
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  • Placing nature: natural history collections and their owners in nineteenth-century provincial England.Samuel J. M. M. Alberti - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (3):291-311.
    The cultural history of museums is crucial to the understanding of nineteenth-century natural history and its place in wider society, and yet although many of the larger metropolitan institutions are well charted, there remains very little accessible work on the hundreds of English collections outside London and the ancient universities. Natural history museums have been studied as part of the imperial project and as instruments of national governments; this paper presents an intermediary level of control, examining the various individuals and (...)
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  • Anecdote and history.Lionel Gossman - 2003 - History and Theory 42 (2):143–168.
    Although the term “anecdote” entered the modern European languages fairly recently and remains to this day ill-defined, the short, freestanding accounts of particular events, true or invented, that are usually referred to as anecdotes have been around from time immemorial. They have also always stood in a close relation to the longer, more elaborate narratives of history, sometimes in a supportive role, as examples and illustrations, sometimes in a challenging role, as the repressed of history—“la petite histoire.” Historians’ relation to (...)
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