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  • English  (4)
  • Comparative Literature - General and Comparative Literary Studies  (4)
  • German Studies  (4)
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  • English  (4)
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  • Comparative Literature - General and Comparative Literary Studies  (4)
  • German Studies  (4)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Walter de Gruyter GmbH ; 2020
    In:  Internationales Archiv für Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Literatur Vol. 45, No. 2 ( 2020-11-09), p. 456-470
    In: Internationales Archiv für Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Literatur, Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Vol. 45, No. 2 ( 2020-11-09), p. 456-470
    Abstract: This paper deals with Moritz Lazarus and Heymann Steinthal’s 19 th century journal Zeitschrift für Völkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft and its media-historical context. I will argue that the medial form of the journal enabled Völkerpsychologie’s founders to put their theory and methodology into practice by creating a forum for interdisciplinary collaboration and unification of the humanities as psychology and thus achieving their goal of a ʻcritique of historical reasonʼ, i. e., revealing the historical nature of reason, ethics, and culture in general.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1865-9128 , 0340-4528
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    Publication Date: 2020
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 195675-9
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2407589-9
    SSG: 7,20
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge University Press (CUP) ; 2019
    In:  Nordic Journal of Linguistics Vol. 42, No. 02 ( 2019-10), p. 135-138
    In: Nordic Journal of Linguistics, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Vol. 42, No. 02 ( 2019-10), p. 135-138
    Abstract: This special issue of Nordic Journal of Linguistics is dedicated to diachronic generative syntax in the North Germanic languages. With the introduction of generative grammar in the late 1950s the historical perspective became less prominent within linguistics. Instead, contemporary language, normally represented by the researcher’s own intuitions, became the unmarked empirical basis within the generative field, although there were some early pioneering studies in generative historical syntax (e.g. Traugott 1972). It was not until the introduction of the Principles and Parameters theory in the 1990s that diachronic syntax emerged as an important domain of inquiry for generative linguists. Since then, the study of syntactic change has added a temporal dimension to the overall enterprise to better understand the nature of variation in human language.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0332-5865 , 1502-4717
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publication Date: 2019
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2027851-2
    SSG: 7,11
    SSG: 7,22
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge University Press (CUP) ; 1990
    In:  American Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Literatures Vol. 2, No. 2 ( 1990-07), p. 137-148
    In: American Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Literatures, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Vol. 2, No. 2 ( 1990-07), p. 137-148
    Abstract: Anatoly Liberman's recent article in this journal (“The phonetic organization of Early Germanic” 2,1:1990) contains a number of potentially important claims about the nature of early Germanic accentuation. (1) His major conclusion appears to be twofold: first, the syllable struture of early Germanic disyllabics must have normally been CVC.V (using “.” to represent a syllable boundary), because CV (and by extension therefore CV.CV) was not a possible structure of a Gothic word. Second, early Germanic possessed no lexical stress (“word stress”), but instead only phrasal stress. (2) These conclusions are at least provocative to those familiar with the massive literature on Germanic accentology, and this was no doubt their intent. In this brief piece, I would like to note several implications and possible extensions of the points Liberman raises and the conclusions he draws, but also to disagree on some points. My perspective here differs from Liberman's primarily in focusing not on early Germanic in relation to its attested daughter languages, but rather on Germanic vis-à-vis Indo-European and some data from the languages of the world, that is, typological data.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1040-8207 , 2163-2030
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publication Date: 1990
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Wiley ; 2016
    In:  Critical Quarterly Vol. 58, No. 2 ( 2016-07)
    In: Critical Quarterly, Wiley, Vol. 58, No. 2 ( 2016-07)
    Abstract: Ashley Tauchert ‘Diary of a literary schizophrenic, 2014’ This is based on a journal I kept during a six‐month stay on an Acute psychiatric ward and then in a rehabilitation clinic. It reviews the circumstances that led to my admission and reflects on my experiences of mental illness in the form of a memoir. The piece is written in a series of undated diary entries which interweave my day‐to‐day life as a psychiatric patient with memories and literary reflections. It opens at the point where I am beginning to emerge from a long period of florid psychosis and ends at the point where I am about to be discharged from hospital. By shifting back and forth between momentary experience and surfacing memory, it offers a detailed account of life on a psychiatric ward alongside the strange and colourful experiences I had while living with psychosis. A.D. Harvey ‘Eratometrics?’ Literature throws up strange coincidences and statistical groupings. One might take warning from Franco Moretti's Maps , Trees , Graphs : Abstract Models for a Literary History , which demonstrates the futility of relying for one's literary historical data on so‐called standard authorities, but statistical analyses of, for example, poetical allusions to Thomas Chatterton or of imitations and translations of the poems of Ossian turn out to be remarkably suggestive. Perhaps we may term this mode of enquiry Eratometrics . A.D. Harvey ‘F.R. Leavis at Armageddon’ The harrowing experiences of Cambridge critic F.R. Leavis in the Great War were part of his legend; it was even supposed that he had been gassed while serving in an ambulance unit near the front. This is not likely to have endeared him to colleagues in the English Faculty at Cambridge, who included at least five former officers who had been wounded in action and whose injuries – in two cases permanently and painfully crippling – are detailed in their army personal files, now held in the National Archives at Kew. Pamela Thurschwell ‘Bringing Nanda forward, or acting your age in The Awkward Age ’ Henry James's 1899 novel The Awkward Age posits the adolescent girl's movement forward into the future as an acute problem for the fin de siècle . The novel's titular pun equates the awkward, individual, in‐between time of adolescence with the awkward, collective, in‐between time of the fin de siècle , leading us both towards the turn‐of‐the‐century ‘invention’ of the modern adolescent, and towards James's exploration of the culturally constructed nature of age as an identity category. The conflation of individual ages with historical ones is significant; James's novel appeared on the cusp of a new century, at a moment when adolescence was in the process of being consolidated as a modern identity category by medical authorities, educators and psychologists. The novel makes explicit the connection between modernity and adolescence, in ways that foreground its troubling adolescent Nanda Brookenham's ‘exposure’ to the dangerous world of adult knowledge that surrounds her. Its deploying of technologies such as the telegraph and the photograph, which mediate presence, speed time up, slow it down, and freeze it, posits the adolescent girl as cognate with modernity; both of her time and ahead of it. In the novel, adolescence is an awkward, unnerving presence, and a significant absence: an identity in the process of being formulated, and an age category to come.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0011-1562 , 1467-8705
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2016
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1473748-6
    SSG: 7,25
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