The search was on the border. I mean the search for books, when rummaging through piles Bellcaire market or detecting a rail volumes in the Sven Hassel Mine trail, between clothes stolen and false colonies. I was with the cheapest, and that meant buying in the domains of the lace. Never bargain: they were on the other side and it would have meant crossing the border that existed between my boring world in a suburban working-class neighborhood and yours, always beyond. A grim world that fascinated me, if only intuitively.
I struggled to find its roots in Baroja. Read The tree of knowledge and became obsessed by Baroja buy every book I could get my hands. I left the eyes in the Austral, pages crisp and letters and bits of snuff. He dreamed of buying the complete works and I got it last year, when published Gutenberg Galaxy.
Shortly after I found in a library edition of Zaragoza Poor life in Madrid. It was a great find. Analyzes the types and groups that make up the underworld of Madrid in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and it brings together experts in criminology and Gil Maestre, Salillas, Sikorski and Fere, along with writers such as Pio Baroja. It is therefore not just a treatise on forensic anthropology, but an entertaining guide to the underworld sallow Madrid at that time surviving in the underworld of Gallofa the Sablee and bohemian. The most wretched poverty.
At times the book resembles more a treatise on zoology (there is a chapter on "Differentiation of Species" and another "Wildlife Madrid offender," for example), and there is something brutish in all that it has . However, it is written without contempt. The scrutiny is thorough, and there is no point not stop crawling. Speaking of criminals, vagrants, murderers, prostitutes, pimps, beggars and invested. Systematised their characteristics, features, from the medical description of the tattoos inverted criminals and prostitutes. It is also possible causes of perversions and the fall in crime and the underworld (especially in the chapter "How to make the offender") or where they may be located in Madrid, these "bad people live."
got the first edition, 1901. It's been over a hundred years. I also bought the German translation, 1910, with introduction by Cesare Lombroso. Meanwhile, the shelves of my library have housed other evidence of similar status. The Melancholy Ruffian gave me Underworld: The offender English , Rafael Salillas, who joined others who bought from Antonio Navarro Fernandez, Constancio Bernaldo de Quirós (one gift Mercutio's friend), or titles that sought to illuminate the dark world of sex and what is not, as some of Ciro Bayo or Max Bembo.
One of my latest purchases was a signed copy of as 'work' lives and underworld people speak , Moses Bermejo. Moisés Bermejo Sánchez (1896-1964) wrote several articles for Navarre thinking about the life of the gangsters, the raterillos, the descuideros and other people of the underclass and social exclusion. As he says in his foreword convoluted, its intention is not to tell the life of the underworld from within, as did other journalists of his era, as Carral y Rivero to a report in Estampa magazine, but to educate readers about the jargon and uses of the thieves and swindlers. The language
addressed the gulfs and Rafael Salillas . And will do so again in Lumpen Alfonso Sastre, marginalization and jerigonça , book that we will soon. _____________________________________________
Bermejo, Moses. as 'work' lives and underworld people speak . Pamplona: Typographical Workshops Social Action, 1931. 119 p. Bernaldo de Quirós
, Constancio; Llanas Aguilaniedo, José María. Poor life Madrid: study psycho with drawings and photographs of natural. Madrid: Rodriguez Serra, 1901. 363 p. Bernaldo de Quirós
, Constancio; Llanas Aguilaniedo, José María. Poor life Madrid: psychosocial study with drawings and photographs . Editing and Justo Broto Salanova notes, introduction of Luis Maristany of Ray, foreword by José Manuel Reverte Coma. Huesca: Instituto de Estudios Huesca, Zaragoza: Egido, 1997. LX, 377 p. Bernaldo de Quirós
, Constancio; Llanas Aguilaniedo, José María. Verbrechertum und Prostitution in Madrid. Mit einem Vorwort von Professor Cesare Lombroso. Berlin: Louis Marcus, ca. 1910. XIX, 340 p.
I struggled to find its roots in Baroja. Read The tree of knowledge and became obsessed by Baroja buy every book I could get my hands. I left the eyes in the Austral, pages crisp and letters and bits of snuff. He dreamed of buying the complete works and I got it last year, when published Gutenberg Galaxy.
Shortly after I found in a library edition of Zaragoza Poor life in Madrid. It was a great find. Analyzes the types and groups that make up the underworld of Madrid in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and it brings together experts in criminology and Gil Maestre, Salillas, Sikorski and Fere, along with writers such as Pio Baroja. It is therefore not just a treatise on forensic anthropology, but an entertaining guide to the underworld sallow Madrid at that time surviving in the underworld of Gallofa the Sablee and bohemian. The most wretched poverty.
At times the book resembles more a treatise on zoology (there is a chapter on "Differentiation of Species" and another "Wildlife Madrid offender," for example), and there is something brutish in all that it has . However, it is written without contempt. The scrutiny is thorough, and there is no point not stop crawling. Speaking of criminals, vagrants, murderers, prostitutes, pimps, beggars and invested. Systematised their characteristics, features, from the medical description of the tattoos inverted criminals and prostitutes. It is also possible causes of perversions and the fall in crime and the underworld (especially in the chapter "How to make the offender") or where they may be located in Madrid, these "bad people live."
got the first edition, 1901. It's been over a hundred years. I also bought the German translation, 1910, with introduction by Cesare Lombroso. Meanwhile, the shelves of my library have housed other evidence of similar status. The Melancholy Ruffian gave me Underworld: The offender English , Rafael Salillas, who joined others who bought from Antonio Navarro Fernandez, Constancio Bernaldo de Quirós (one gift Mercutio's friend), or titles that sought to illuminate the dark world of sex and what is not, as some of Ciro Bayo or Max Bembo.
One of my latest purchases was a signed copy of as 'work' lives and underworld people speak , Moses Bermejo. Moisés Bermejo Sánchez (1896-1964) wrote several articles for Navarre thinking about the life of the gangsters, the raterillos, the descuideros and other people of the underclass and social exclusion. As he says in his foreword convoluted, its intention is not to tell the life of the underworld from within, as did other journalists of his era, as Carral y Rivero to a report in Estampa magazine, but to educate readers about the jargon and uses of the thieves and swindlers. The language
addressed the gulfs and Rafael Salillas . And will do so again in Lumpen Alfonso Sastre, marginalization and jerigonça , book that we will soon. _____________________________________________
Bermejo, Moses. as 'work' lives and underworld people speak . Pamplona: Typographical Workshops Social Action, 1931. 119 p. Bernaldo de Quirós
, Constancio; Llanas Aguilaniedo, José María. Poor life Madrid: study psycho with drawings and photographs of natural. Madrid: Rodriguez Serra, 1901. 363 p. Bernaldo de Quirós
, Constancio; Llanas Aguilaniedo, José María. Poor life Madrid: psychosocial study with drawings and photographs . Editing and Justo Broto Salanova notes, introduction of Luis Maristany of Ray, foreword by José Manuel Reverte Coma. Huesca: Instituto de Estudios Huesca, Zaragoza: Egido, 1997. LX, 377 p. Bernaldo de Quirós
, Constancio; Llanas Aguilaniedo, José María. Verbrechertum und Prostitution in Madrid. Mit einem Vorwort von Professor Cesare Lombroso. Berlin: Louis Marcus, ca. 1910. XIX, 340 p.
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