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  1. Conscience and the Composition of Piers Plowman
    Autor*in: Wood, Sarah
    Erschienen: 2012; ©2012
    Verlag:  Oxford University Press, Incorporated, Oxford

    By showing how Langland transformed Conscience as he composed the A, B and C texts of Piers Plowman, Sarah Wood offers a new approach to reading the serial versions of the poem. While the three versions have customarily been read in parallel-text... mehr

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    By showing how Langland transformed Conscience as he composed the A, B and C texts of Piers Plowman, Sarah Wood offers a new approach to reading the serial versions of the poem. While the three versions have customarily been read in parallel-text formats, she demonstrates that Langland's revisions are newly comprehensible if read in sequence. Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- Note on the Text -- Introduction: Conscience and Personification in Piers Plowman -- 1. 'Who May Scape þe Sclaundre': Scandal, Complaint, and Invective in B 3-4 -- 2. Penitential Texts and Vernacular Conscience in B 13-14 -- 3. 'Ecce Rex': Conscience and Homiletic Discourse in B 19 -- 4. 'To a Lord for a Lettre Leue to Haue': Lordly Conscience and the Friars in B 20 -- 5. New Modes in the C Text: Clerical 'Suffraunce' and Vernacular Counsel -- 6. Conscience in the Versions of Piers Plowman -- Conclusion: Conscience and the Composition of Piers Plowman -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780191636486
    Schriftenreihe: Oxford English Monographs
    Schlagworte: Langland, William, -- 1330?-1400? -- Piers Plowman; Christian poetry, English (Middle) -- History and criticism; Electronic books
    Umfang: 1 online resource (200 pages)
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  2. Interkulturelle Kommunikation im Asylverfahren
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Frankfurt

    Danksagung 5; Inhalt; 1. Einleitung: Asylverfahren in Österreich 9; 2. Interkulturelle Kommunikation 13; 2. 1 Kommunikation zwischen Kulturen? Eine Kritik vorangestellt 13; 2.2 Sprachwissenschaftliche Ansätze zur Untersuchung Interkultureller... mehr

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    Danksagung 5; Inhalt; 1. Einleitung: Asylverfahren in Österreich 9; 2. Interkulturelle Kommunikation 13; 2. 1 Kommunikation zwischen Kulturen? Eine Kritik vorangestellt 13; 2.2 Sprachwissenschaftliche Ansätze zur Untersuchung Interkultureller Kommunikation 16; 2.2.1 Ethnomethodologie: Kultur aus der Teilnehmerperspektive 16; 2.2.2 Interaktionale Soziolinguistik: Missverständnisse in Interkultureller Kommunikation 20; 2.2.3 Kulturelle Diversität & Asymmetrie 24; 2. 3 Schnittstellen: Kulturelle Differenz, Asymmetrie und Kommunikation im Asylverfahren 31 3. Teilnehmende Beobachtung, sprachwissenschaftliche Auswertung? 354. Kulturelle Differenz überbrücken - Rahmenbedingungen für verständnissicherndes Handeln 43; 4.1 Fremde Namen, Bezeichnungen und Lebensweisen 49; 4.2 „Do you understand me?"- Rückfragen und Anzeigen von Nicht-Verstehen als verständnissicherndes Handeln 53; 4.3 Home Narratives 58; 4.4 Kulturmittlung 63; 4.5 Verständnissicherndes Handeln im institutionellen Kontext 66; 5. Sprachliche Diversität im monolingualen Kontext 69; 5.1 „Stammesdialekte", „einfaches Englisch" und „exotische" Sprachen 69 5.2 Sprachwahl: "Ist Englisch ok?" 725. 3 Die Verhandlungsniederschrift - „Schreiben Sie..." 76; 5.4 Von Einsprachigkeit zu Eindeutigkeit 82; 6. „Grauzonen": Plausibilität als Teil der Glaubwürdigkeitsprüfung 85; 6.1 Länderdokumentation: „Das weiß ich aus diversen Berichten" 86; 6.2 Fragen an die DolmetscherInnen: „Kann das stimmen?" 89; 6.3 Das Wissen der AsylwerberInnen testen: „Was wird zu Ostern gefeiert?" 91; 6.4 Common Sense: „Das widerspricht jeglicher Lebenserfahrung." 94; 6.5 Wissen - Wahrheit - Macht 95 7. Zwischen Signifikation, Legitimation und Herrschaft: Der Umgang mit kultureller Differenz im Asylverfahren 97Literatur 101; Anhang 111; A) Korpus 111; B) Zitierte Auszüge aus Beobachtungsprotokollen, Texten und Interviews 112; C) Abkürzungen 113; D) Transkriptionskonventionen 113 Asylwerber muessen im Laufe eines Asylverfahrens ihre Erlebnisse wiederholt Beamten erzaehlen, denen der Herkunftskontext der Antragsteller ueberwiegend fremd ist. Wie gehen die beteiligten Akteure in diesem Setting mit kultureller Differenz um? Dieser Frage nachgehend, hat die Autorin von 2008 bis 2010 Verhandlungen am Unabhaengigen Bundesasylsenat und Asylgerichtshof in Wien teilnehmend beobachtet und qualitative Interviews gefuehrt. Sie kommt zu dem Ergebnis, dass den Akteuren unterschiedliche sprachliche Mittel zur Verfuegung stehen, um interkulturelle Missverstaendnisse zu vermeiden und g

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783653012415
    RVK Klassifikation: GD 8850 ; MS 3600 ; MS 7850
    Auflage/Ausgabe: Online-Ausg.
    Schriftenreihe: EBL-Schweitzer
    Schlagworte: Verwaltungsgericht; Rechtsstreit; Verwaltungsverfahren; Asylbewerber; Kommunikation; Problem; Kulturkonflikt; Wissen; Bewertung; Teilnehmende Beobachtung; Interview; Immigrants; Intercultural communication; Refugees
    Umfang: Online-Ressource (1 online resource (116 p.))
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  3. The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare
    Erschienen: 2012; ©2012
    Verlag:  Oxford University Press USA - OSO, Oxford

    An essential resource for the study of Shakespeare, The Oxford Handbook to Shakespeare contains forty specially written essays. It provides fresh and distinctive readings of his plays and poems, reflects on the current state of Shakespeare Studies,... mehr

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    An essential resource for the study of Shakespeare, The Oxford Handbook to Shakespeare contains forty specially written essays. It provides fresh and distinctive readings of his plays and poems, reflects on the current state of Shakespeare Studies, and speculates on the likely future directions it will take. Cover -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- PART I: TEXTS -- 1. Authorship -- 2. Collaboration -- 3. Manuscript Circulation -- 4. Quarto and Folio -- 5. Revision -- 6. Dramatic Metre -- 7. Book Trade -- 8. Early Readers -- PART II: CONDITIONS -- 9. Economy -- 10. Status -- 11. Domestic Life -- 12. Gender -- 13. Language -- 14. Dramaturgy -- 15. Censorship -- PART III: WORKS -- 16. The Early Shakespeare -- 17. Middle Shakespeare -- 18. Poetry -- 19. Late Shakespeare -- PART IV: PERFORMANCES -- 20. Local Records -- 21. Patronage -- 22. Repertory System -- 23. Theatre as Business -- 24. Foreign Worlds -- 25. Audience Reception -- 26. Shakespeare on Film and Television -- 27. Marketing -- PART V: SPECULATIONS -- 28. Classics -- 29. Character -- 30. Law -- 31. Formation of Nationhood -- 32. Republicanism -- 33. Empire -- 34. Philosophy -- 35. Pragmatism -- 36. Religion -- 37. Architecture -- 38. Science and Technology -- 39. Shakespeare and America -- 40. Shakespeare and the World -- References and Further Reading -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Y -- Z.

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780191618123
    Schriftenreihe: Oxford Handbooks Ser.
    Schlagworte: Shakespeare, William,-1564-1616-Criticism and interpretation; Electronic books
    Umfang: 1 online resource (846 pages)
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  4. Molecular modeling of the swelling properties and interlayer structure of Cs, Na, K-Montmorillonite: Effects of charge distribution in the clay layers
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  HAL CCSD

    Safe and sustainable management of nuclear waste poses major scientific challenges to make the environmental footprint of nuclear energy as small as possible for very long periods of time. As many other countries, France is considering the deep... mehr

     

    Safe and sustainable management of nuclear waste poses major scientific challenges to make the environmental footprint of nuclear energy as small as possible for very long periods of time. As many other countries, France is considering the deep geological disposal (in the Callovo-Oxfordian (COx) argillite formations of the Paris basin) as a reliable way of storing high-level radioactive waste in order to provide adequate protection for humans and the environment. In addition to being proven geologically stable for million years, the natural and engineered clay barriers can benefit from many favorable properties, such as low permeability, high sorption capacity, etc. The mineralogical composition of the Callovo-Oxfordian argillite shows about 41% of clay minerals (23% of interstratified illite/smectite, 14% of illite-type minerals, 2% kaolinite and 2% chlorite) [1,2]. A non-negligible amount of organic matter is also present (~1%) [3], and it is known that the interaction of natural organic matter (NOM) with radionuclides and clays can affect the solubility and toxicity of trace elements in natural aqueous environments [4,5]. Reliable prediction of the behaviour of radionuclides and their transport and retention in clayey formations at nuclear waste repositories requires detailed molecular scale understanding of these complex multicomponent systems. Computational molecular modelling has already become an important tool in the study of thermodynamic, structural and transport properties of hydrated clays (e.g., [6-8]). As the first step in our study of the effects of organic molecules on the adsorption and transport of radionuclides in hydrated clay systems we have investigated the effects of the ordering in charge distributions on the swelling behavior of simulated clays. Montmorillonite was chosen as a model of smectite clay. Montmorillonite structure consists of aluminum-oxygen octahedral sheet sandwiched between two opposing silicon-oxygen tetrahedral sheets giving rise to a 2:1 clay mineral. Isomorphic substitutions in the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets are responsible of the negative layer charge of montmorillonite clay minerals having the chemical composition (Si8-xXx)(Al4-yYy)O20(OH)4 where X = Al, Y = Mg, Fe.[9]. The montmorillonite models for our study are based on a pyrophillite unit cell structure (5.16Å×8.966Å×9.347Å) obtained from the crystallographic data of Lee et al. [10]. The 4×4×2 simulation supercells were built and substitutions were made in the pyrophillite structure in order to approximate as close as possible the chemical composition of Wyoming montmorillonite M24(Si248Al8)(Al112Mg16)O640(OH)128, where M is either Cs+, Na+, or K+ [9]. We explored three different models of substitution distributions. In the first model, the substitutions were uniformly and orderly distributed within the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets. In the second model, the substituted positions were kept ordered in the octahedral sheets but made disordered in the tetrahedral one. In the third model, the substituted positions of the octahedral sites were additionally made disordered. In order to study the swelling behavior of these montmorillonites, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were run in the NPzT statistical ensemble (T = 298 K, Pz = 1 bar) for each of the three different substitution models and with 22 different hydration states ranging from 0 to 700 mgwater/gclay (from 0 to 42 H2O molecules per one monovalent cation). All MD runs were performed for a total of 2 ns using the CLAYFF force field [11]. At the beginning of the simulations, the cations were placed at the midplane of the clay interlayer space and water molecules were added randomly. After the system reached equilibrium, the last 1ns of each MD trajectory was used to compute the clay basal spacing and the swelling thermodynamic properties: hydration energy, immersion energy, isosteric heat of adsorption. The MD simulation results indicate that in addition to the commonly observed 1-layer and 2-layer hydrates, stable hydration states corresponding to 3-layer and 4-layer hydrates can also be distinguished. The stable states corresponding to the minima of hydration energy were then selected to run further 500 ps NVT-ensemble MD simulations at the same temperature and with the volume fixed at the average value resulting from the corresponding previous NPzT simulation. The equilibrium parts of these NVT-simulated trajectories were then used to calculate the structural (radial distribution functions, atomic density profiles) and dynamical (diffusion coefficient) properties of the hydrated montmorillonite. References [1] ERM (1997) Echantillons d'argiles du forage EST104 : Etude minéralogique approfondie. Rapport ANDRA n° D.RP.0ERM.97.008 [2] ERM (1996b) Caractérisation d'échantillons d'argiles du forage EST103. Rapport ANDRA n° B.RP.0ERM.96.003 [3] ANDRA (2005) Dossier 2005 Argile, Référentiel du site de Meuse Haute Marne. C.R.P.ADS.04.0022 Andra : Paris [4] Buffle, J. (1988) Complexation Reactions in Aquatic Systems: An Analytical Approach; Ellis Horwood Ltd.:Chichester, p 692. [5] Tipping, E. (2002) Cation Binding by Humic Substances, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, p 434. [6] Smith, D.E., Langmuir, 14, 5959-5967 (1998). [7] Rotenberg, B., Marry, V., Vuilleumier, R., Malikova, N., Simon, C., Turq, P., Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 71, 5089-5101 (2007). [8] Liu, X.D., Lu, X.C., Wang, R.C., Zhou, H.Q. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 72, 1837-1847 (2008). [9] Tsipursky, S.I., Drits, V.A. Clay Minerals, 19, 177-193 (1984). [10] Lee, J.H. and Guggenheim, S. American Mineralogist, 66, 350-357 (1981). [11] Cygan, R.T., Liang, J.J., Kalinichev, A.G. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 108, 1255-1266 (2004).

     

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    Quelle: BASE Fachausschnitt AVL
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Konferenzveröffentlichung; Weitere
    Format: Online
    Übergeordneter Titel: 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement" ; http://hal.in2p3.fr/in2p3-00769152 ; 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement", Oct 2012, Montpellier, France
    Schlagworte: [CHIM.THEO]Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistry; [CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry; [SDE.IE]Environmental Sciences/Environmental Engineering; [SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry; [SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes; [SDU.STU.MI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Mineralogy
  5. The Elegiac Passion
    Jealousy in Roman Love Elegy
    Erschienen: 2012; ©2012
    Verlag:  Oxford University Press USA - OSO, Cary

    The Elegiac Passion is a study of the central role of jealousy in Roman love elegy, both the detailed ways in which it is represented and the ramifications of these features for the nature of the genre itself. Cover -- Contents -- Preface --... mehr

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    The Elegiac Passion is a study of the central role of jealousy in Roman love elegy, both the detailed ways in which it is represented and the ramifications of these features for the nature of the genre itself. Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- THE EMOTIONS IN GENERAL -- DEFINITIONS AND METHODOLOGY -- THE DISEASE THAT CANNOT BE NAMED -- WHY ROMAN ELEGY IS DISTINCTIVE -- CHAPTER OVERVIEW -- 1. Rival Authorities: Elegy and Philosophy on Love -- THE LOVER'S PLIGHT -- THE DIAGNOSIS: LOVE AS ILLNESS -- THE ELEGIAC CURE -- CONCLUSIONS -- 2. The Nature of Jealousy -- THE SYMPTOMS OF JEALOUSY -- Expectations of Fidelity (Propertius 1.3) -- Unrestrained Suspicions (Propertius 1.3) -- Vehement Reactions (Propertius 3.15) -- Jealousy Out in the Open (Ovid Amores 2.7) -- Gender and Showing One's Feelings -- WHEN JEALOUSY IS APPROPRIATE (OR NOT) -- When Jealousy Is Counterproductive -- When Jealousy Is Demanded -- CONCLUSIONS -- 3. The Triggers of Jealousy: Suspicions and Evidence -- FEMALE SKEPTICISM -- MALE CREDULITY -- CONCLUSIONS -- 4. Responses to Jealousy: Violence and Restraint -- FEMALE AGGRESSION -- MALE ATTEMPTS AT SELF-CONTROL -- LOSS OF SELF-CONTROL -- CRIMES OF PASSION -- CONCLUSIONS -- 5. The Lover as Poet: Trust and Distrust of Poets -- INTERNAL READERS: LOVE POETS AS RIVALS -- Suspicious Monitoring -- Boasts and Threats -- EXTERNAL READERS: VICARIOUS PARTICIPANTS IN JEALOUSY -- Visualization and Identification -- Doubts and Suspicions -- CONCLUSIONS -- 6. What Jealousy Is About: Threats to Fides -- THE IMPORTANCE OF FIDES -- THE RANGE OF FIDES -- Civil War (Propertius 1.21 and 1.22) -- Family and History (Propertius 2.6) -- Rome and the East (Propertius 3.13) -- CONCLUSIONS -- Conclusion: A Genre Structured by Jealousy -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- V -- W -- Z.

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780199925919
    Schriftenreihe: Emotions of the Past Ser.
    Schlagworte: Elegiac poetry, Latin -- History and criticism; Jealousy in literature; Electronic books
    Umfang: 1 online resource (187 pages)
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  6. Overture to Death
    Autor*in: Marsh, Ngaio
    Erschienen: 2012; ©1939
    Verlag:  Felony & Mayhem, LLC, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar]

    It’s murder in the little English village, but the two local spinsters, Miss Campanula, the victim, and Miss Prentice, her friend who may have been the intended victim, are not exactly the beloved little old ladies of song and story. They were (and... mehr

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    It’s murder in the little English village, but the two local spinsters, Miss Campanula, the victim, and Miss Prentice, her friend who may have been the intended victim, are not exactly the beloved little old ladies of song and story. They were (and are) waspish, gossiping snobs, passionate only about their own narrowly defined religion….and, perhaps, about the local vicar. But could they have been sufficiently unpleasant to provoke a murderer?. OVERTURE TO DEATH -- CONTENTS -- 1. They Meet at Pen Cuckoo -- 2. Six Parts and Seven Actors -- 3. They Choose a Play -- 4. Cue for Music -- 5. Above Cloudyfold -- 6. Rehearsal -- 7. Vignettes -- 8. Catastrophe -- 9. C.I.D. -- 10. According to Templett -- 11. According to Roper -- 12. Further Vignettes -- 13. Sunday Morning -- 14. According to the Jernighams -- 15. Alleyn Goes to Church -- 16. The Top Lane Incident -- 17. Confession from a Priest -- 18. Mysterious Lady -- 19. Statement from Templett -- 20. According to Miss Wright -- 21. According to Mr. Saul Tranter -- 22. Letter to Troy -- 23. Frightened Lady -- 24. The Peculiarity of Miss P. -- 25. Final Vignettes -- 26. Miss P. Feels the Draught -- 27. Case Ends.

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781937384227
    Schriftenreihe: Roderick Alleyn ; v.8
    Schlagworte: 1. Alleyn, Roderick (Fictitious character) ; Fiction. 2. Police ; Great Britain ; Fiction. I. Title; Electronic books
    Umfang: 1 online resource (325 pages)
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  7. Imperial Earth
    Erschienen: 2012; ©2012
    Verlag:  RosettaBooks, Newburyport

    Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- I TITAN -- 1. A SHRIEK IN THE NIGHT -- 2. DYNASTY -- 3. INVITATION TO A CENTENNIAL -- 4. THE RED MOON -- 5. THE POLITICS OF TIME AND SPACE -- 6. BY THE BONNY, BONNY BANKS OF LOCH HELLBREW... mehr

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    Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- I TITAN -- 1. A SHRIEK IN THE NIGHT -- 2. DYNASTY -- 3. INVITATION TO A CENTENNIAL -- 4. THE RED MOON -- 5. THE POLITICS OF TIME AND SPACE -- 6. BY THE BONNY, BONNY BANKS OF LOCH HELLBREW -- 7. A CROSS OF TITANITE -- 8. CHILDREN OF THE CORRIDORS -- 9. THE FATAL GIFT -- 10. WORLD'S END -- II TRANSIT -- 11. SIRIUS -- 12. LAST WORDS -- 13. THE LONGEST VOYAGE -- 14. SONGS OF EMPIRE -- 15. AT THE NODE -- 16. PORT VAN ALLEN -- III TERRA -- 17. WASHINGTON, D.C. -- 18. EMBASSY -- 19. MOUNT VERNON -- 20. THE TASTE OF HONEY -- 21. HISTORY LESSON -- 22. BUDGET -- 23. DAUGHTERS OF THE REVOLUTIONS -- 24. CALINDY -- 25. MYSTERY TOUR -- 26. PRIMEVAL FOREST -- 27. THE GHOST FROM THE GRAND BANKS -- 28. AKHENATON AND CLEOPATRA -- 29. PARTY GAMES -- 30. THE RIVALS -- 31. THE ISLAND OF DR. MOHAMMED -- 32. GOLDEN REEF -- 33. SLEUTH -- 34. STAR DAY -- 35. A MESSAGE FROM TITAN -- 36. THE EYE OF ALLAH -- 37. MEETING AT CYCLOPS -- 38. THE LISTENERS -- 39. BUSINESS AND DESIRE -- 40. ARGUS PANOPTES -- 41. INDEPENDENCE DAY -- 42. THE MIRROR OF THE SEA -- IV TITAN -- 43. HOMECOMING -- Acknowledgments and Notes -- Additional Note -- Endnote.

     

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    ISBN: 9780795325571
    Schlagworte: Utopias-Fiction..; Science fiction, English; Electronic books
    Umfang: 1 online resource (224 pages)
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  8. Tragic pathos
    pity and fear in Greek philosophy and tragedy
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    "Scholars have often focused on understanding Aristotle's poetic theory, and particularly the concept of catharsis in the Poetics, as a response to Plato's critique of pity in the Republic. However, this book shows that, while Greek thinkers all... mehr

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    "Scholars have often focused on understanding Aristotle's poetic theory, and particularly the concept of catharsis in the Poetics, as a response to Plato's critique of pity in the Republic. However, this book shows that, while Greek thinkers all acknowledge pity and some form of fear as responses to tragedy, each assumes a different purpose for the two emotions and mode of presentation and, to a degree, understanding of them. This book reassesses expressions of the emotions within different tragedies and explores emotional responses to and discussions of the tragedies by contemporary philosophers, providing insights into the ethical and social implications of the emotions"-- 2.6 CONTEXT (F): FEAR AND IMAGINATION (HEL. 16 17); 2.7 IF THE SPECTATOR ACCEPTS THE "DECEPTION" OF TRAGEDY, ARE HIS EMOTIONS AUTHENTIC?; CHAPTER 3 Plato: from reality to tragedy and back; 3.1 THE PROBLEM WITH ORDINARY "FEAR" AND AESTHETIC FEAR; 3.2 AESTHETIC EMOTIONS: IMPURE PLEASURES, "FALSE" KNOWLEDGE; 3.3 PHILOSOPHICAL DRAMA AND THE TRANSFORMEDTRAGIC EMOTIONS; CHAPTER 4 Aristotle: the first "theorist" of the aesthetic emotions; 4.1 PITY AND FEAR AS RESPONSES OF THE AUDIENCEIN THE POETICS: AN IMPASSE; 4.2 PITY AND FEAR AS RESPONSES OF THE AUDIENCE:RHETORIC AND DRAMA. 4.3 AESTHETIC PITY: CREATING A VISION OFSUFFERING THROUGH SPEECH4.3.1 Seeing emotion: visual versus vision; 4.3.2 Conclusions on Pity. Fear. Transfer of emotion through Phantasia; 4.4 PROPER PLEASURE (OIKEIA HEDONE) FROM EMOTIONS; 4.4.1 Proper pleasure as a species of mimesis; 4.4.2 Proper pleasure supervening the "activity" of tragedy; 4.4.3 Painful emotions in pleasure: Oikeia hedone and the pleasures of memory and mourning; 4.5 PREDECESSORS AND SUCCESSORS. TIMOCLES. HOW ORIGINAL IS ARISTOTLE?; 4.6 GENERAL CONCLUSIONS; PART II Pity and fear within tragedies; CHAPTER 5 An introduction. 5.1 PURPOSE OF SURVEY5.2 PITY AND FEAR AS EXPRESSIONS OF INTERNAL AUDIENCES ANDTHE PHILOSOPHICAL VIEWS (GORGIAS, PLATO, ARISTOTLE):A DIFFERENT EMPHASIS; 5.3 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PITY AND FEAR AS EXPRESSIONSOF INTERNAL AUDIENCES AND EXTERNAL (CONTEMPORARYATHENIAN) AUDIENCES; 5.3.1 Internal audiences as models for external audiences; 5.3.2 Linking internal audiences and external audiences: problems surrounding pity and fear; CHAPTER 6 Aeschylus: Persians; 6.1 A REVIEW OF INTERPRETATIONS; 6.2 PATRIOTIC PRIDE AND ITS COMPATIBILITY WITH TRAGIC PITY. Cover; TRAGIC PATHOS; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Preface and acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; Introduction; PREMISE AND PURPOSE; EMOTION: EMOTION AS RESPONSE TO TRAGEDY, TO ART(S); SOME SPECIFICATIONS: AESTHETIC EMOTIONS -- POLITICAL ANDETHICAL IMPLICATIONS; EMOTION AND THE LANGUAGE-GAME:CULTURAL UNITY AND VARIETY; A BRIEF REVIEW OF SCHOLARSHIP: PROBLEMS; Pity; FEAR. THE "ONTOLOGICAL" PROBLEM OF DRAMATIC FEAR; MORAL PROBLEMS OF ORDINARY FEAR: THEIR CONSEQUENCESFOR AESTHETIC FEAR; THE TWO AS PAIR; NOTES ON TERMINOLOGY: AESTHETIC OR MIMETIC? THE TERMSFOR PITY AND FEAR(S). Methodology and structureA synopsis; PART I Theoretical views about pity and fear as aesthetic emotions; CHAPTER 1 Drama and the emotions: an Indo-European connection?; CHAPTER 2 Gorgias: a strange trio, the poetic emotions; 2.1 CONTEXT (A): PITY AND HATRED, GUIDED REACTIONSFOR GORGIAS' AUDIENCE (HEL. 7); 2.2 CONTEXT (B): SPEECH CAN STOP FEAR ANDINCREASE PITY (HEL. 8); 2.3 CONTEXT (C): POETRY AROUSES PITY, FEARFUL SHIVER, AND LONGING (HEL. 9); 2.4 CONTEXT (D): INCANTATIONS MAY BRING PLEASUREAND BANISH PAIN (HEL. 10); 2.5 CONTEXT (E): WORDS, LIKE MEDICINE, CAN INSPIRE FEAROR COURAGE (HEL. 14).

     

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  9. A creator's guide to transmedia storytelling
    how to captivate and engage audiences across multiple platforms
    Erschienen: c2012
    Verlag:  McGraw-Hill, New York

    The First How-To Strategy Guide to Transmedia Storytelling "Phillips's book is a powerful tool for anyone who wants to make a career for him- or herself within the world of transmedia. Through her guidance, the reader is able to understand the... mehr

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    The First How-To Strategy Guide to Transmedia Storytelling "Phillips's book is a powerful tool for anyone who wants to make a career for him- or herself within the world of transmedia. Through her guidance, the reader is able to understand the fundamentals of transmedia and the power it can have when used with a compelling and strong story." -David Gale, Executive Vice President, MTV Cross Media "Transmedia storytelling is a bold and exciting new arena for creativity and innovation. . . . Andrea Phillips provides a compelling, thoughtful, and clear guide to a next generation of creators in this medium. She demystifies the process and proves that you, too, can push the envelope and be part of the future of storytelling." -Michelle Satter, Founding Director, Sundance Institute Feature Film Program "An excellent and fair-minded primer and survey of the underpinnings and fast-evolving techniques behind multiplatform narrative. Andrea Phillips is one of a small handful of writers capable of both practicing and clearly conveying the principles of transmedia storytelling. Highly recommended!" -Jeff Gomez, CEO, Starlight Runner Entertainment "A no-nonsense guide for the fun-filled and strangely awesome world of transmedia storytelling." -C. C. Chapman, coauthor of Content Rules and Amazing Things Will Happen Includes Q&A sessions with the world's leading experts in transmedia storytelling About the Book: What is transmedia storytelling and what can it do for you? It's the buzzword for a new generation-a revolutionary technique for telling stories across multiple media platforms and formats-and it's rapidly becoming the go-to strategy for a wide variety of businesses. If you work in marketing, entertaining, or advertising, transmedia storytelling is a must-have tool for pulling people into your world. Why do you need A Creator's Guide to Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Section I: IntroductIon to TransmedIa -- 1 Once Upon a Time . . . -- 2 What is Transmedia, Anyway? -- 3 Transmedia is More Than a Marketing Gimmick -- 4 Significant Prior Art to Learn From -- Section II: Storytelling -- 5 The Four Creative Purposes for Transmedia Storytelling -- 6 Learn the Basics of Traditional Storytelling -- 7 How Story and Branding Affect Marketing -- 8 Writing for Transmedia is Different -- 9 Online, everything is Characterization -- 10 Conveying Action Across Multiple Media -- Section III: Structure -- 11 Fine-Tune for Depth or for Scale (Not Both) -- 12 Special Considerations for Blockbuster Transmedia Franchises -- 13 Interactivity Creates Deeper Engagement -- 14 Uses and Misuses for User-Generated Content -- 15 Challenging the Audience to Act -- 16 Make Your Audience a Character, Too -- Section IV: ProductIon -- 17 Project Management: The Unsung Necessity -- 18 Finding and Keeping a Strong Core Team -- 19 Websites and Tech Development: DIY or Outsource? -- 20 Don't Be a Jerk on Social Media -- 21 Email and Phone: Cheap and Effective -- 22 Making and Using Prerecorded Content -- 23 Bringing Your Story into the Real World -- Section V: The Big Picture -- 24 How to Fund Production Costs -- 25 . . . And Maybe Make Some Profit, Too -- 26 Forging Your Own Transmedia Career -- 27 Critical Legal and Ethical Considerations -- 28 Get Excited and Make Things -- Acknowledgments -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y -- Z.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781280698408; 1280698403; 9780071791526
    RVK Klassifikation: ER 765 ; AP 32950
    Auflage/Ausgabe: Online-Ausg.
    Schlagworte: Digital storytelling; Interactive multimedia; Internet entertainment industry; Marketing; Digital storytelling; Interactive multimedia; Internet entertainment industry; Marketing
    Weitere Schlagworte: Digital storytelling; Interactive multimedia; Internet entertainment industry; Array
    Umfang: Online-Ressource (1 online resource (xii, 272 p.)), ill. (some col.)
    Bemerkung(en):

    Includes bibliographical references and index. - Description based on print version record

  10. Lives of the novelists
    a history of fiction in 294 lives
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Yale University Press, New Haven, [Conn.]

    Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- The Seventeenth Century -- 1. John Bunyan -- 2. Aphra Behn -- 3. Daniel Defoe -- 4. Samuel Richardson -- The Eighteenth Century -- 5. Henry Fielding -- 7. Samuel Johnson -- 6. John... mehr

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    Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- The Seventeenth Century -- 1. John Bunyan -- 2. Aphra Behn -- 3. Daniel Defoe -- 4. Samuel Richardson -- The Eighteenth Century -- 5. Henry Fielding -- 7. Samuel Johnson -- 6. John Cleland -- 8. Laurence Sterne -- 9. Oliver Goldsmith -- 10. Robert Bage -- 11. Olaudah Equiano -- 12. Fanny Burney -- 13. Susanna Haswell -- 14. Mrs Radcliffe -- 15. James Hogg -- 16. Charles Brockden Brown -- 17. Walter Scott -- 18. Jane Austen -- 19. M. G. Lewis -- 20. Mrs Frances Trollope -- 21. Thomas De Quincey -- 22. James Fenimore Cooper 23. John Polidori -- 24. Mary Shelley -- 25. Mrs Catherine Gore -- The Nineteenth Century -- 26. Harriet Martineau -- 27. The Bulwer-Lyttons: Edward and Rosina -- 28. Benjamin Disraeli -- 29. Nathaniel Hawthorne -- 30. Harrison Ainsworth -- 31. Charles (James) Lever -- 32. J. H. Ingraham -- 33. Postscript: Prentiss Ingraham -- 34. Edgar Allan Poe -- 35. Mrs Gaskell -- 36. Fanny Fern -- 37. William Makepeace Thackeray -- 38. Charles Dickens -- 39. Mrs Henry Wood -- 40. Anthony Trollope -- 41. Grace Aguilar -- 42. The Brontës: Patrick, Charlotte, Branwell, Emily, Anne -- 43. Maria Monk 44. George Eliot -- 45. Postscript: G. H. Lewes -- 46. Herman Melville -- 47. Mrs E. D. E. N. Southworth -- 48. Eliza Lynn Linton -- 49. Postscript: Beatrice Harraden -- 50. Sylvanus Cobb Jr -- 51. Charlotte Yonge -- 52. Wilkie Collins -- 53. R. M. Ballantyne -- 54. Mary J. Holmes -- 55. Dinah Craik -- 56. George Meredith -- 57. Mrs Oliphant -- 58. Horatio Alger Jr -- 59. George du Maurier -- 60. Postscript: Daphne du Maurier -- 61. Frank R. Stockton -- 62. 'Walter' -- 63. Mrs Mary Braddon -- 64. Samuel Butler -- 65. Mark Twain -- 66. B. L. Farjeon -- 67. Ouida -- 68. Thomas Hardy 69. Ambrose Bierce -- 70. Lewis Wingfield -- 71. Henry James -- 72. Bram Stoker -- 73. Grant Allen -- 74. Richard Jefferies -- 75. Robert Louis Stevenson -- 76. Mrs Humphry Ward -- 77. Hall Caine -- 78. Sarah Grand -- 79. Marie Corelli -- 80. Lady Florence Dixie -- 81. Olive Schreiner -- 82. William Sharp -- 83. L. Frank Baum -- 84. H. Rider Haggard -- 85. Joseph Conrad -- 86. Ella Hepworth Dixon -- 87. Mary Cholmondeley -- 88. Arthur Conan Doyle -- 89. Postscript: John (Edmund) Gardner -- 90. Frank Danby -- 91. George Egerton -- 92. Kenneth Grahame -- 93. J. M. Barrie 94. Charlotte Perkins Gilman -- 95. Postscript: S. Weir Mitchell -- 96. Amanda Ros -- 97. Owen Wister -- 98. Amy Levy -- 99. Florence L. Barclay -- 100. O. Henry -- 101. Violet Hunt -- 102. Edith Wharton -- 103. W. J. Locke -- 104. Thomas Dixon -- 105. Israel Zangwill -- 106. M. P. Shiel -- 107. H. G. Wells -- 108. Arnold Bennett -- 109. John Oliver Hobbes -- 110. Norman Douglas -- 111. Booth Tarkington -- 112. Erskine Childers -- 113. Saki -- 114. B. M. Bower -- 115. Stephen Crane -- 116. Theodore Dreiser -- 117. Zane Grey -- 118. W. Somerset Maugham -- 119. John Buchan 120. Edgar Rice Burroughs

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 0300182430; 9780300182439
    Schlagworte: Novelists; Fiction; American fiction; Novelists, English; English fiction
    Umfang: Online-Ressource (xiii, 818 p)
    Bemerkung(en):

    "First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Profile Books Ltd."--t.p. verso

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  11. The pseudo-historical image of the Prophet Muhammad in medieval Latin literature
    a repertory
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  De Gruyter, Berlin

    17 Peter of Poitiers, Chapter Headings for a Treatise against the Saracens18 Peter the Venerable, Against the Sect of the Saracens; 19 Richard of Cluny, Chronicle; 20 Otto of Freising, Chronicles or History of the Two Cities; 21 William of Tyre,... mehr

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    17 Peter of Poitiers, Chapter Headings for a Treatise against the Saracens18 Peter the Venerable, Against the Sect of the Saracens; 19 Richard of Cluny, Chronicle; 20 Otto of Freising, Chronicles or History of the Two Cities; 21 William of Tyre, History of the Deeds Done Beyond the Sea; 22 Godfrey of Viterbo, Pantheon; 23 Ralph Niger, Chronicles; 24 Gerald of Wales, On the Instruction of a Prince; 25 Alanus of Lille, On the Catholic Faith, Book 4: Against the Pagans; 26 Joachim of Fiore, Various works; 27 Mark of Toledo, Prologue to his translation of the Qur'an 13 Sigebert of Gembloux, Chronicles14 Frutolf of Michelsberg and Ekkehard of Aura, Universal Chronicle; 15 William of Malmesbury, Collection of Historical Texts and Deeds of the English Kings; 16 Corpus Cluniacense; 1. Peter the Venerable, The Sum of all the Heresies and Diabolical Sect of the Saracens; 2. The Tales of the Saracens; a. Prologue; b. The Mistake-Laden and Ridiculous Chronicle of the Saracens; c. The Book of Mu?ammad's Genealogy and his Nurturing; d. The Doctrine of Mu?ammad; 3. The Law of the Saracens; 4. The Letter of the Saracen and the Response of the Christian Explanation of the Apostolic Symbol The Muzzle of the Jews; 38 Thomas Aquinas, The Summa against Gentiles; 39 Roger Bacon, Moral Philosophy; 40 Vincent of Beauvais, The Mirror of History; 41 Benedict of Alignan, The Treatise of Faith against Various Heresies; 42 Martinus Polonus, Chronicle of the Supreme Pontiffs and Emperors, and on the Seven Ages of the World; 43 Humbert of Romans, Minor Work in Three Parts; 44 William of Tripoli, Notice on Muhammad, On The State of the Saracens; 45 The Book of Denuding or Exposing or the Discloser Introduction; 1 The Byzantine-Arabic Chronicle of 741 and the Mozarabic Chronicle of 754; 2 Eulogius of Córdoba, The Memorial of the Saints and The Book in Defense of the Martyrs; 3 John of Seville, Letter to Paulus Albarus; 4 Paulus Albarus, The Luminous Guide; 5 Pascasius Radbertus, Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew; 6 Anastasius the Librarian, History of the Church; 7 The Genealogy of the Saracens; 8 Landulphus Sagax, Roman History; 9 Rodulphus Glaber, Histories; 10 Petrus Alfonsi, Dialogues against the Jews; 11 Hugh of Fleury, History of the Church; 12 Hugh of Flavigny, Chronicle Prologue to the De Unione Dei by Ibn Tumart28 Master Thietmar, The Way to the Holy Land; 29 The Life of Mu?ammad from the Manuscript of Uncastillo; 30 Oliver of Paderborn, The History of the Capture of Damiata; Letters; 31 James of Vitry, History of the East; 32 Lucas of Tuy, Chronicle of the World; 33 Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada, History of the Arabs; 34 William of Auvergne, On the Faith and the Laws against the Gentiles; 35 Roger of Wendover, Flowers of Histories; 36 Matthew Paris, Major Chronicles; 37 Ramon Marti, On the Sect of Mu?ammad, or Fourfold Refutation This volume collects medieval Latin texts from the 8th to the 14th centuries that shape a pseudo-historical image of the Prophet Muhammad. The texts, from critical editions, manuscripts and early printed books, are arranged in chronological order in 55 entries. Each is provided with an introduction, notes and a bibliography. The volume is an essential tool for the historical research of Christian-Muslim relations

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
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    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783110263831; 3110263831
    Schriftenreihe: Studien zur Geschichte und Kultur des islamischen Orients. Neue folge 1862-1295 ; Bd. 26
    Studien zur Geschichte und Kultur des islamischen Orients. Neue folge ; Bd. 26
    Schlagworte: Latin literature, Medieval and modern; Latin literature, Medieval and modern; Latin literature, Medieval and modern; Latin literature, Medieval and modern; RELIGION ; Islam ; History; Biography; Latin literature, Medieval and modern; Literature; Bibliography; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Weitere Schlagworte: Muḥammad -632; Muḥammad -632; Muḥammad Prophet (-632); Muḥammad Prophet (-632); Muhammad d. 632; Muhammad d. 632; Muḥammad
    Umfang: Online Ressource (xiii, 541 p.)
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    Includes bibliographical references and index

  12. The Insider's Guide to Technical Writing.
    Autor*in: Laan, Krista
    Erschienen: 2012; ©2012
    Verlag:  XML Press, Laguna Hills

    Every complex product needs to be explained to its users, and technical writers, also known as technical communicators, are the ones who do that job. A growing field, technical writing requires multiple skills, including an understanding of... mehr

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    Every complex product needs to be explained to its users, and technical writers, also known as technical communicators, are the ones who do that job. A growing field, technical writing requires multiple skills, including an understanding of technology, writing ability, and great people skills. Whether you're thinking of becoming a technical writer, just starting out, or you've been working for a while and feel the need to take your skills to the next level, The Insider's Guide to Technical Writing can help you be a successful technical writer and build a satisfying career. Inside the Book Is This Job for Me? What does it take to be a technical writer?Building the Foundation: What skills and tools do you need to get started?The Best Laid Plans: How do you create a schedule that won't make you go crazy? How do you manage different development processes, including Agile methodologies?On the Job: What does it take to walk into a job and be productive right away?The Tech Writer Toolkit: How do you create style guides, indexes, templates and layouts? How do you manage localization and translation and all the other non-writing parts of the job?I Love My Job: How do you handle the ups and downs of being a technical writer?Appendixes: References to websites, books, and other resources to keep you learning.Index. Front cover -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Foreword -- About this Book -- In This Book -- Part 1. Is This the Job for Me? -- Chapter 1. Calling All Tech Writers -- Chapter 2. What Does a Technical Writer Do, Anyway -- Chapter 3. Having the Write Stuff -- Chapter 4. Breaking Into the Field -- Part 2. Building the Foundation -- Chapter 5. How to Write Good (Documentation) -- Chapter 6. Best Practices Make Perfect -- Chapter 7. It's All About Audience -- Chapter8. The Deliverables -- Part 3. The Best Laid Plans -- Chapter 9. Process and Planning -- Chapter 10. Become Your Own Subject Matter Expert -- Chapter 11. You Want It When? -- Chapter 12. You Want It How? -- Part 4. On the Job -- Chapter 13. Getting Started -- Chapter 14. Gathering Information -- Chapter 15. Putting It All Together -- Chapter 16. Everybody's a Critic-Reviews and Reviewers -- Chapter 17. Wrapping it Up -- Part 5. The Tech Writer Toolkit -- Chapter 18. The Always-in-Style Guide -- Chapter 19. Front and Back Matter: Or Do They? -- Chapter 20. Design and Layout -- Chapter 21. Gaining a Global Perspective: Localization and Translation -- Part 6. I Love My Job, I Love My Job, I Love My Job... -- Chapter 22. Working Outside the Box -- Chapter 23. I Didn't Think It Would Be Like This! -- Chapter 24. Managing Your Career -- Appendixes -- Appendix A. Tech Talk: The Tech Writer's Glossary -- Appendix B. For Your Bookshelf -- Appendix C. Websites -- Index.

     

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    Beteiligt: Hackos, Joann T (MitwirkendeR)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781457182440
    Auflage/Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    Schlagworte: Technical writing--Handbooks, manuals, etc; Technical writing ; Handbooks, manuals, etc; Electronic books
    Umfang: 1 online resource (348 pages)
    Bemerkung(en):

    Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources

  13. A new companion to the Gothic
    Beteiligt: Punter, David (Hrsg.)
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester

    Machine generated contents note: pt. I Gothic Backgrounds -- 1. In Gothic Darkly: Heterotopia, History, Culture / Fred Botting -- 2. The Goths in History and Pre-Gothic Gothic / Robin Sowerby -- 3. Gothic Shakespeare / Dale Townshend -- 4. European... mehr

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    Machine generated contents note: pt. I Gothic Backgrounds -- 1. In Gothic Darkly: Heterotopia, History, Culture / Fred Botting -- 2. The Goths in History and Pre-Gothic Gothic / Robin Sowerby -- 3. Gothic Shakespeare / Dale Townshend -- 4. European Gothic / Neil Cornwell -- 5. The Gothic Ballad / Douglass H. Thomson -- pt. II The Original Gothic -- 6. Ann Radcliffe and Matthew Lewis / Robert Miles -- 7. Mary Shelley, Author of Frankenstein / Nora Crook -- 8. Walter Scott, James Hogg, and Scottish Gothic / Ian Duncan -- 9. Irish Gothic: C.R. Maturin and J.S. LeFanu / Victor Sage -- 10. The Political Culture of Gothic Drama / David Worrall -- pt. III Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Transformations -- 11. Nineteenth-Century American Gothic / Allan Lloyd Smith -- 12. The Ghost Story / Julia Briggs -- 13. Gothic in the 1890s / Glennis Byron -- 14. Fictional Vampires in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries / William Hughes -- 15. Horror Fiction: In Search of a Definition / Clive Bloom. Note continued: 16. Love Bites: Contemporary Women's Vampire Fictions / Gina Wisker -- 17. Gothic Film / Heidi Kaye -- 18. Shape and Shadow: On Poetry and the Uncanny / David Punter -- pt. IV Gothic Theory and Genre -- 19. Gothic Criticism / Robert Mighall -- 20. The Gothic Sublime / Vijay Mishra -- 21. Psychoanalysis and the Gothic / Michelle A. Masse -- 22.Comic Gothic / Sue Zlosnik -- 23. Gothic and the Graphic Novel / Julia Round -- 24. Goth Culture / Catherine Spooner -- pt. V The Globalization of Gothic -- 25. Global Gothic / Glennis Byron -- 26. Australian Gothic / Ken Gelder -- 27. New Zealand Gothic / Ian Conrich -- 28. Canadian Gothic / Cynthia Sugars -- 29. Asian Gothic / Katarzyna Ancuta -- 30. Japanese Gothic / Charles Shiro Inouye -- pt. VI The Continuing Debate -- 31. Can You Forgive Her? The Gothic Heroine and Her Critics / Kate Ferguson Ellis -- 32. Picture This: Stephen King's Queer Gothic / Steven Bruhm. Note continued: 33. Seeing Things: Gothic and the Madness of Interpretation / Scott Brewster -- 34. The Gothic Ghost of the Counterfeit and the Progress of Abjection / Jerrold E. Hogle -- 35. The Magical Realism of the Contemporary Gothic / Lucie Armitt -- 36. Welcome the Coming, Speed the Parting Guest: Hospitality and the Gothic / Joanne Watkiss. The thoroughly expanded and updated New Companion to the Gothic, provides a series of stimulating insights into Gothic writing, its history and genealogy. The addition of 12 new essays and a section on 'Global Gothic' reflects the direction Gothic criticism has taken over the last decade. Many of the original essays have been revised to reflect current debatesOffers comprehensive coverage of criticism of the Gothic and of the various theoretical approaches it has inspired and spawnedFeatures important and original essays by leading scholars in the fieldThe editor is widely recognized as the fou

     

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  14. A new companion to the Gothic
    Beteiligt: Punter, David (HerausgeberIn)
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester

    Machine generated contents note: pt. I Gothic Backgrounds -- 1. In Gothic Darkly: Heterotopia, History, Culture / Fred Botting -- 2. The Goths in History and Pre-Gothic Gothic / Robin Sowerby -- 3. Gothic Shakespeare / Dale Townshend -- 4. European... mehr

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    Machine generated contents note: pt. I Gothic Backgrounds -- 1. In Gothic Darkly: Heterotopia, History, Culture / Fred Botting -- 2. The Goths in History and Pre-Gothic Gothic / Robin Sowerby -- 3. Gothic Shakespeare / Dale Townshend -- 4. European Gothic / Neil Cornwell -- 5. The Gothic Ballad / Douglass H. Thomson -- pt. II The Original Gothic -- 6. Ann Radcliffe and Matthew Lewis / Robert Miles -- 7. Mary Shelley, Author of Frankenstein / Nora Crook -- 8. Walter Scott, James Hogg, and Scottish Gothic / Ian Duncan -- 9. Irish Gothic: C.R. Maturin and J.S. LeFanu / Victor Sage -- 10. The Political Culture of Gothic Drama / David Worrall -- pt. III Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Transformations -- 11. Nineteenth-Century American Gothic / Allan Lloyd Smith -- 12. The Ghost Story / Julia Briggs -- 13. Gothic in the 1890s / Glennis Byron -- 14. Fictional Vampires in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries / William Hughes -- 15. Horror Fiction: In Search of a Definition / Clive Bloom. Note continued: 16. Love Bites: Contemporary Women's Vampire Fictions / Gina Wisker -- 17. Gothic Film / Heidi Kaye -- 18. Shape and Shadow: On Poetry and the Uncanny / David Punter -- pt. IV Gothic Theory and Genre -- 19. Gothic Criticism / Robert Mighall -- 20. The Gothic Sublime / Vijay Mishra -- 21. Psychoanalysis and the Gothic / Michelle A. Masse -- 22.Comic Gothic / Sue Zlosnik -- 23. Gothic and the Graphic Novel / Julia Round -- 24. Goth Culture / Catherine Spooner -- pt. V The Globalization of Gothic -- 25. Global Gothic / Glennis Byron -- 26. Australian Gothic / Ken Gelder -- 27. New Zealand Gothic / Ian Conrich -- 28. Canadian Gothic / Cynthia Sugars -- 29. Asian Gothic / Katarzyna Ancuta -- 30. Japanese Gothic / Charles Shiro Inouye -- pt. VI The Continuing Debate -- 31. Can You Forgive Her? The Gothic Heroine and Her Critics / Kate Ferguson Ellis -- 32. Picture This: Stephen King's Queer Gothic / Steven Bruhm. Note continued: 33. Seeing Things: Gothic and the Madness of Interpretation / Scott Brewster -- 34. The Gothic Ghost of the Counterfeit and the Progress of Abjection / Jerrold E. Hogle -- 35. The Magical Realism of the Contemporary Gothic / Lucie Armitt -- 36. Welcome the Coming, Speed the Parting Guest: Hospitality and the Gothic / Joanne Watkiss. The thoroughly expanded and updated New Companion to the Gothic, provides a series of stimulating insights into Gothic writing, its history and genealogy. The addition of 12 new essays and a section on 'Global Gothic' reflects the direction Gothic criticism has taken over the last decade. Many of the original essays have been revised to reflect current debatesOffers comprehensive coverage of criticism of the Gothic and of the various theoretical approaches it has inspired and spawnedFeatures important and original essays by leading scholars in the fieldThe editor is widely recognized as the fou

     

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  15. Lives of the novelists
    a history of fiction in 294 lives
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Yale University Press, New Haven [Conn.]

    21. Thomas De Quincey22. James Fenimore Cooper -- 23. John Polidori -- 24. Mary Shelley -- 25. Mrs Catherine Gore -- The Nineteenth Century -- 26. Harriet Martineau -- 27. The Bulwer-Lyttons: Edward and Rosina -- 28. Benjamin Disraeli -- 29.... mehr

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    21. Thomas De Quincey22. James Fenimore Cooper -- 23. John Polidori -- 24. Mary Shelley -- 25. Mrs Catherine Gore -- The Nineteenth Century -- 26. Harriet Martineau -- 27. The Bulwer-Lyttons: Edward and Rosina -- 28. Benjamin Disraeli -- 29. Nathaniel Hawthorne -- 30. Harrison Ainsworth -- 31. Charles (James) Lever -- 32. J.H. Ingraham -- 33. Postscript: Prentiss Ingraham -- 34. Edgar Allan Poe -- 35. Mrs Gaskell -- 36. Fanny Fern -- 37. William Makepeace Thackeray -- 38. Charles Dickens -- 39. Mrs Henry Wood -- 40. Anthony Trollope 41. Grace Aguilar42. The Brontñs: Patrick, Charlotte, Branwell, Emily, Anne -- 43. Maria Monk -- 44. George Eliot -- 45. Postscript: G.H. Lewes -- 46. Herman Melville -- 47. Mrs E.D.E.N. Southworth -- 48. Eliza Lynn Linton -- 49. Postscript: Beatrice Harraden -- 50. Sylvanus Cobb Jr -- 51. Charlotte Yonge -- 52. Wilkie Collins -- 53. R.M. Ballantyne -- 54. Mary J. Holmes -- 55. Dinah Craik -- 56. George Meredith -- 57. Mrs Oliphant -- 58. Horatio Alger Jr -- 59. George du Maurier -- 60. Postscript: Daphne du Maurier -- 61. Frank R. Stockton 62. �Walter�63. Mrs Mary Braddon -- 64. Samuel Butler -- 65. Mark Twain -- 66. B.L. Farjeon -- 67. Ouida -- 68. Thomas Hardy -- 69. Ambrose Bierce -- 70. Lewis Wingfield -- 71. Henry James -- 72. Bram Stoker -- 73. Grant Allen -- 74. Richard Jefferies -- 75. Robert Louis Stevenson -- 76. Mrs Humphry Ward -- 77. Hall Caine -- 78. Sarah Grand -- 79. Marie Corelli -- 80. Lady Florence Dixie -- 81. Olive Schreiner -- 82. William Sharp -- 83. L. Frank Baum -- 84. H. Rider Haggard -- 85. Joseph Conrad -- 86. Ella Hepworth Dixon 87. Mary Cholmondeley88. Arthur Conan Doyle -- 89. Postscript: John (Edmund) Gardner -- 90. Frank Danby -- 91. George Egerton -- 92. Kenneth Grahame -- 93. J.M. Barrie -- 94. Charlotte Perkins Gilman -- 95. Postscript: S. Weir Mitchell -- 96. Amanda Ros -- 97. Owen Wister -- 98. Amy Levy -- 99. Florence L. Barclay -- 100. O. Henry -- 101. Violet Hunt -- 102. Edith Wharton -- 103. W.J. Locke -- 104. Thomas Dixon -- 105. Israel Zangwill -- 106. M.P. Shiel -- 107. H.G. Wells -- 108. Arnold Bennett -- 109. John Oliver Hobbes Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- The Seventeenth Century -- 1. John Bunyan -- 2. Aphra Behn -- 3. Daniel Defoe -- 4. Samuel Richardson -- The Eighteenth Century -- 5. Henry Fielding -- 7. Samuel Johnson -- 6. John Cleland -- 8. Laurence Sterne -- 9. Oliver Goldsmith -- 10. Robert Bage -- 11. Olaudah Equiano -- 12. Fanny Burney -- 13. Susanna Haswell -- 14. Mrs Radcliffe -- 15. James Hogg -- 16. Charles Brockden Brown -- 17. Walter Scott -- 18. Jane Austen -- 19. M.G. Lewis -- 20. Mrs Frances Trollope No previous author has attempted a book such as this: a complete history of novels written in the English language, from the genre's seventeenth-century origins to the present day. In the spirit of Dr. Johnson's Lives of the Poets, acclaimed critic and scholar John Sutherland selects 294 writers whose works illustrate the best of every kind of fiction--from gothic, penny dreadful, and pornography to fantasy, romance, and high literature. Each author was chosen, Professor Sutherland explains, because his or her books are well worth reading and are likely to remain so for at least another century. Sutherland presents these authors in chronological order, in each case deftly combining a lively and informative biographical sketch with an opinionated assessment of the writer's work. Taken together, these novelists provide both a history of the novel and a guide to its rich variety. Always entertaining, and sometimes shocking, Sutherland considers writers as diverse as Daniel Defoe, Henry James, James Joyce, Edgar Allan Poe, Virginia Woolf, Michael Crichton, Jeffrey Archer, and Jacqueline Susann

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780300182439; 0300182430
    Schlagworte: English fiction; Novelists, English; American fiction; Novelists; Fiction; Novelists; English fiction; Fiction; American fiction; Novelists, English; American fiction; English fiction; Fiction; Novelists; Novelists, English; LITERARY CRITICISM ; European ; English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh; American fiction; English fiction; Fiction; Novelists; Novelists, English; Biographies; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Umfang: Online Ressource (xiii, 818 pages)
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    "First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Profile Books Ltd."--Title page verso. - Includes bibliographical references and index. - Print version record

  16. Early modern playhouse manuscripts and the editing of Shakespeare
    Autor*in: Werstine, Paul
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    "London Playhouse Manuscripts and the Editing of Shakespeare argues for editing Shakespeare's plays in a new way, without pretending to distinguish authorial from theatrical versions. Drawing on the work of the influential scholars A.W. Pollard and... mehr

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    "London Playhouse Manuscripts and the Editing of Shakespeare argues for editing Shakespeare's plays in a new way, without pretending to distinguish authorial from theatrical versions. Drawing on the work of the influential scholars A.W. Pollard and W.W. Greg, Werstine tackles the difficult issues surrounding 'foul papers' and 'promptbooks' to redefine these fundamental categories of current Shakespeare editing. In an extensive and detailed analysis, this book offers insight into the methods of theatrical personnel and a reconstruction of backstage practices in playhouses of Shakespeare's time."-- 10. The Welsh Embassador (Embassador) Cardiff Public Library MS 4.12 1623-4 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 11. Thomas Heywood's [The Captives] (Captives) British Library MS Egerton 19943 September 3, 1624 -- CaptivesDescription and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 12. Philip Massinger's The Parliamt of Love (Parliamt) Victoria and Albert Museum MS Dyce 25.F.33. November 3, 1624 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 13. Nathan Field, John Fletcher, and Philip Massinger's The Honest mans Fortune (HMF) Victoria and Albert Museum MS Dyce 25.F.9 February 8, 1624/25 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 14. Thomas Lodge and Robert Greene's A Looking glasse, for london and England (Looking glasse) Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago PR2297.L8 160- 1605-25? -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 15. John Clavell's The Sodderd Cittizen (Sodderd) Wiltshire and Swindon Record Office MS 865/502/2 1628-30 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 16. Philip Massinger's Beleeue as you List (Beleeue) British Library MS Egerton 2828 May 6, 1631 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 17. Walter Mountfort's The Lanchinge of the Mary ... Or the Seamans honest wyfe (Lanchinge) British Library MS Egerton 199415 June 27, 1633 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 18. John Fletcher's Bonduca Queene of Brittaine (Bonduca) British Library MS Additional 36758 1619 (or?1616)-35 -- Description and hands -- Evidence of theatrical provenance -- 19. Henry Glapthorne's the Lady=mot<her (Lady=mother) British Library MS Egerton 19949 October 15, 1635 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance. 20. The waspe (Waspe) Alnwick Castle MS 507 1636-40 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 21. Edward Sharpham's The Fleire (Fleire) British Library 11773.c.8?1607-?1650 -- Synopsis (of the uncut version) -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 22. J.C.'s [A Pleasant Comedie, Called The Two Merry Milke-Maids. Or, The Best Words weare the Garland] (Milke-Maids) Folger Shakespeare Library STC 4281 copy 2 1620-80? -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- Appendix A Characteristics of Gregian "foul papers" in playhouse texts -- Naming -- (1) Multiple designations of the same character in SDD and SPP -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Charlemagne and Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent and Moore) -- Printed texts -- (2) Ambiguous character designations -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent and Moore) -- Printed texts -- (3) Dialogue errors in naming -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes -- SPP -- (4) Erroneous SPP -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent) -- Printed texts -- (5) Misplaced SPP -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS -- (6) Missing SPP -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS -- Printed texts -- SDD, principally entrances -- (7) Missing entrances (Greg notes that "specification of re-entry is exceptional in early texts" [1955, 133]) -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Charlemagne and Woodstock). Cover -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Preface -- List of abbreviations, short titles, and symbols -- Introduction: reading W.W. Greg -- Chapter 1 The discovery of "foul papers" -- Greg's 1927 analysis and theory of the Bonduca texts -- Greg's later theories of the Bonduca texts -- Reception of "foul papers" by Shakespeare editors -- The failed search for extant examples of "foul papers" -- The Bonduca "foul papers" and early printed Shakespeare plays -- Shifting passages -- Lacunae -- Problems with "foul papers" -- Notes -- Chapter 2 Redefining "foul papers" -- Stage adaptation of Bonduca -- Knight as scribe -- Knight's rearrangement of the Bonduca text -- Knight's SPP -- Knight's lacunae -- Knight's SDD -- Knight's term "Foul papers" -- Notes -- Chapter 3 Playhouse MSS: what bookkeepers did not do -- The Early Greg on Backstage Plots and Theatrical Playbooks -- Greg the Shakespeare textual critic on theatrical playbooks -- Variation and ambiguity in naming in theatrical texts -- Stage directions: errors of inclusion and exclusion -- Indefinite and petitory stage directions -- Some interventions by bookkeepers -- Identifying the nature of the lost MSS behind the Shakespeare printed plays -- Notes -- Chapter 4 Playhouse MSS: what bookkeepers did -- Naming -- Stage directions: errors of commission and omission -- Bordeaux -- Captives -- Ironside -- Moore -- Noble Ladys -- Indefinite SDD -- Loose ends, false starts and unresolved confusions -- Duplications in dialogue -- Actors' names -- Bordeaux -- SM/LT -- Noble Ladys -- Ironside -- Beleeue -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 5 Behind the stage/in the tiring house -- The bookkeeper's duties before performance -- The prompter's duties during performance -- Warning SDD -- The King's Revels Company in the 1630s -- Warnings in Embassador -- Notes -- Conclusion: empirical editing of Shakespeare -- Notes. MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Moore) -- Printed texts -- (8) Indefinite entrances involving speakers -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent and Moore) -- Printed texts -- (9) Other indefinite SDD -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Charlemagne and Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent and Moore) -- Printed texts -- (10) Omission of necessary characters from SDD -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS -- Printed texts -- (11) Inclusion of unnecessary characters in entrance directions -- Authorial MSS -- (12) Mutes and ghosts -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Charlemagne and Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent) -- Printed texts -- (13) Double entrances -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent) -- (14) Erroneous SDD -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- (15) Petitory SDD -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Kent and Moore) -- Exits -- (16) Missing exits -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Moore) -- Printed texts -- (17) Misplaced SDD, principally exits -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes (including dubitable Woodstock) -- MSS by theatrical scribes -- Authorial MSS (including dubitable Moore) -- Revision and deletion -- (18) Marginal insertions of dialogue -- MSS by apparently non-theatrical scribes. The manuscripts -- Descriptions of the texts -- Dates -- Dramatic content -- Material description -- Hands and inks -- Theatrical provenance -- Some features common to playhouse texts -- 1.?Anthony Munday's Iohn A kent & Iohn a Cumber (Kent) Huntington Library, HM 500?1587-96 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 2.?Robert Greene's [John of Bordeaux or The Second Part of Friar Bacon] (Bordeaux) Alnwick Castle MS 507 1590-1600 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 3.?Anthony Munday's, Henry Chettle's,?Thomas Heywood's,?William Shakespeare's, and Thomas Dekker's Sir Thomas Moore (Moore) British Library MS Harl. 7368 1586?-1605? -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 4. [Charlemagne or the Distracted Emperor] (Charlemagne) British Library MS Egerton 19946?1604-7 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 5. [The First Part of the Reign of King Richard the Second, or Thomas of Woodstock] (Woodstock) British Library MS Egerton 19948 c. 1590-?1610 -- Description and hands -- Inks -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 6.?Thomas Middleton's The second Maydens tragedy [or The Lady's Tragedy] (SM/LT) British Library MS Lansdowne 807 October 31, 1611 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 7. John Fletcher and Philip Massinger's TTragedy of Sr Iohn Van Olden Barnauelt (Barnauelt) British Library MS Additional 18653 August, 1619 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 8. The 2. Noble Ladys, and The Converted Coniurer (Noble Ladys) British Library MS Egerton 199411 1619-23 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance -- 9. Edmond Ironside The English King (Ironside) British Library MS Egerton 19945 1593-1624 -- Description and hands -- Evidence for theatrical provenance.

     

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  17. Discovering arguments
    an introduction to critical thinking, writing, and style
    Autor*in: Palmer, William
    Erschienen: [2012]
    Verlag:  Pearson Prentice Hall, Boston

    Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Communication and Persuasion: Logos, Pathos, Ethos -- Attention, Arguing, and Inquiry -- What are arguments? -- Examples of arguments inviting personal experience -- Examples of arguments inviting research --... mehr

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    Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Communication and Persuasion: Logos, Pathos, Ethos -- Attention, Arguing, and Inquiry -- What are arguments? -- Examples of arguments inviting personal experience -- Examples of arguments inviting research -- The process of inquiry -- The paradigm shift -- Communicating Clearly and Effectively -- "Don't Judge Me by My Tights" / Sascha Radetsky -- Convincing reasons and evidence -- "Freedom from Choice" / Brian A. Countney -- Writing Assignment: Personal Argument Essay -- Your writing situation -- Two Strategies for Finding Topics -- Freewriting -- Mapping -- Rhetoric and Rhetorical Situation -- Rhetorical situation -- Kairos -- Writing Persuasively -- The Persuasive Appeals -- Logos -- Recognizing logos -- "On Human Survival" / S. I. Hayakawa -- Watch out for overgeneralizations -- Pathos -- Recognizing pathos -- "If I Told You, Would You Want to Hear?" / Julia Kraus -- Humor as pathos -- Ethos -- Recognizing ethos -- "Will Part of You Be Left Behind?" / Elisabeth Bletsch -- Thesis Statements -- Evaluating your thesis statement -- Engaging Your Audience: Titles, Introductions, Conclusions -- Features of good titles -- Title strategies -- Titles to avoid -- Features of good introductions -- Introductory strategies -- Introductions to avoid -- Features of good conclusions -- Concluding strategies -- Conclusions to avoid -- Actively Reading an Essay -- "No, I Heard You -- I Just Don't Think It's Funny" / Sarah Krumrie -- "Forgo the Major Dilemma" / Margo Brines -- Sharing and Evaluating Essays -- A Note on Defining Grammar, Mechanics, and Usage -- A Critical Thinker's Guide for Evaluating Writing -- INTERCHAPTER 1 Style and Voice -- Diction -- Monosyllabic words -- Multisyllabic words -- Pretentious writing -- Other Features of Diction -- Specific or general -- Concrete or abstract -- Literal or figurative -- Literal language -- Figurative language -- Avoid cliches -- Precise words -- Watch out for things -- Voice -- Tone -- Analyzing attitude toward audience -- Analyzing attitude toward subject -- Sentence Tools -- Simple sentences -- Joining complete thoughts: coordination -- Using semicolons to join complete thoughts -- Using semicolons with formal transition words -- Using semicolons in a complex series -- Solving Two Common Sentence Problems -- Comma splices -- Run-on sentences -- ch. 2 Strategies of Argumentation -- Using Examples, Authorities, and Statistics -- Examples and illustrations -- Writing Assignment: Illustration -- Using Authorities -- Using Statistics -- Using Contraries -- Using contradictions and paradoxes -- Contradictions -- Writing assignment: Contradiction -- Paradoxes -- Paradox and tolerance for ambiguity -- Either/Or thinking -- Writing assignment: Paradox -- The wisdom of contraries -- Using Comparison -- Organizing comparison: block and alternate patterns -- Writing assignment: Comparison -- Using Refutation -- Writing assignment: Refutation -- Using Induction and Deduction -- Induction -- Deduction -- Using Narration and Description -- Narration -- Description -- Using Classification -- Writing assignment: Classification -- Using Cause and Effect -- Writing assignment: Cause and effect -- Using Analogy -- Explaining the mind -- Writing assignment: Analogy -- Using Humor -- Humorous tone -- Humor as satire -- Using Definition -- Digging for roots of words -- Writing assignment: Definition essay -- Writing assignment: Exploring an essay -- Exploring an Essay -- "Choose Wisely" / Ashley Yuill -- "A Feeling of Wildness" / David Gessner -- "Rejecting Feminism Makes No Sense" / Leonard Pitts, Jr. -- "Eat All That You Can Eat" / Dave Barry -- INTERCHAPTER 2 Diction and Repetition -- Repeating Words for Emphasis -- Alliteration -- Sentence Tools -- Joining complete and incomplete thoughts: Subordination -- Colons and dashes and voice -- Colons -- Dashes -- Using pairs of dashes -- Italics (underlining) and voice -- Parentheses and voice -- Fine-Tuning Sentences -- Sentence fragments: Pros and cons -- Conciseness -- Omit needless words I -- Omit needless words II -- ch. 3 The Toulmin Method and Problems in Reasoning -- Using the Toulmin Method to Argue -- Kinds of arguments -- kinds of claims -- Laws and policies -- Reality, facts -- Values, morals, taste -- Warrants -- Stating the warrant -- "Practicing the Toulmin Method of Arguing" / Daniel May -- Using Toumlin to Analyze an Editorial Cartoon -- "Toulmin Analysis of an Editorial Cartoon" / Alyssa Huntoon -- "Why Single Out Cell Phones?" / Greg Nelson -- Exploring an essay using the Toulmin method -- "Serve or Fail" / Dave Eggers -- "Exploring Dave Eggers's 'Serve or Fail' with the Toulmin Method" / Margo Brines -- Writing Assignment: Exploring an Essay with the Toulmin Method -- "Children Last" / Kathleen Parker -- "Republican Moms for Marijuana: 'Time to Legalize Is Now'" / Jessica Peck Corry -- "Weak Negotiating Fathers" / Mike Adams -- Problems in Reasoning -- Finding the facts -- Implications, Assumptions, and Inferences -- Implications -- Assumptions -- Inferences -- Fallacies -- Problems of Insufficient Evidence -- Overgeneralizing -- "Wallets and Purses" / John Gray -- Card stacking -- Ad ignorantium -- Post hoc, ergo propter hoc -- Problems Based on Irrelevant Information -- Ad baculum -- Ad hominem -- Fallacy of opposition -- Genetic fallacy -- Guilt by association -- Ad misericordiam -- Ad populum -- Bandwagon -- Plain folks and snob appeal -- Ad verecundiam -- Red herring -- Weak opponent -- Tu quoque -- Oversimplification -- Problems of Ambiguity -- Amphibole -- Begging the question -- Equivocation -- Loaded language -- False analogy -- Other Problems of Faulty Reasoning -- False dilemma (either/or thinking) -- Non sequitur -- Rationalization -- Reductio ad absurdum -- Slippery slope -- INTERCHAPTER 3 Strategies of Repetition -- Sentence Tools -- Parallelism -- Anaphora -- Epistrophe -- The Power of Threes in Sentences -- "Baby, Baby, Baby, 3 Has Its Charms" / Susan Ager -- Using threes in sentences: Rising order or not -- Varying sentence beginnings: Three ways -- Using -ing phrases -- Misusing -ing phrases: misplaced modifiers -- Using -ed or -en phrases -- Using to phrases -- ch. 4 Rogerian Argument -- Problems with the Argument Culture -- Rogerian Argument -- Common ground -- Advantages and disadvantages of Rogerian argument -- Applying Rogerian Argument -- "Brute" / Richard Selzer -- Writing Assignment: Personal Essay Using Rogerian Argument -- "I Now Pronounce You Lovers. Wait. What?" / Christina Islas -- Writing Assignment: Using Rogerian Argument to Analyze Essays -- Critical Reading Strategies -- Outlining and summarizing -- Summary of Sowell's essay -- Options for writing assignment: Using Rogerian argument to analyze essays -- "Animal, Vegetable, Miserable" / Gary Steiner -- Student Model Paper -- "The Ethics of Consumption" / Alyssa Huntoon -- Readings for Rogerian Argument -- "The Undocumented American Dream" / Courtney E. Martin -- "5 Reasons Illegal Immigrants Shouldn't Be Given American Citizenship" / John Hawkins -- "Cognitive Enhancement on Campus: Taking Competition Seriously" / Benjamin Gould -- "The Real Tragedy of a Notre Dame Football Recruit's Spring Break Death" / Mitch Albom -- "There's No Benefit to Lowering the Drinking Age" / Robert Voas -- "The Case against 21" / John J. Miller -- "The Message of Same-Sex Marriage" / Maggie Gallagher -- "The Fragmented Generation" / Howard Gardner -- INTERCHAPTER 4 Style and Contraries -- Sentence Tools -- Antithesis -- Antithesis and balanced sentences -- Loose and periodic sentences -- Fine-Tuning Sentences -- False starts -- Active and passive verbs -- ch. 5 Rhetorical Analysis -- What Is a Rhetorical Analysis? -- Why Do a Rhetorical Analysis? -- Guidelines for Exploring an Essay for a Rhetorical Analysis -- Writing Assignment: A Rhetorical Analysis -- "Is America Still Making Men?" / Dennis Prager -- "Rhetorical Analysis of Dennis Prager's 'Is America Still Making Men?'" / Lauren Sypniewski -- Readings for Rhetorical Analysis -- "Welcome to the 'Club'" / Charles M. Blow -- "Don't Shoot Holes in Gun Control Bills" / Mitch Albom -- "The Power and Mystery of Naming Things" / Eve Ensler -- "Whoever We Are, Loss Finds Us and Defines Us" / Anna Quindlen -- "Sept. 12, 2001: We'll Go Forward from This Moment" / Leonard Pitts, Jr. -- "A Call for Unity: Letter from Eight White Clergymen" / C. C. J. Carpenter -- "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" / Martin Luther King, Jr. -- INTERCHAPTER 5 Exploring Style -- Presenting yourself in e-mail -- E-mail Etiquette -- Using what you have learned -- Tools of Style -- Guidelines for Writing an Essay to Explore Style -- Exploring the style of a passage -- Writing Assignment: Exploring the Style of an Essay or a Speech -- "The Swooshification of the World" / Rick Reilly -- "Analyzing Style with a Swoosh" / Gavin McMacken -- Essay and Speech for Exploration -- "Being Perfect" / Anna Quindlen -- "I Have a Dream" / Martin Luther King, Jr. -- ch. 6 Visual Arguments -- Photographs -- News photographs -- Feature photography -- Staged images -- Documentary photographs -- Writing Assignment: Photographs -- Student Essays Exploring Photographs -- "A Window to a Generation" / Duncan Ferguson -- "Talk, Talk, Talk" / Elizabeth Nichols -- Like a photograph, a painting -- Advertisements -- Special Considerations for Exploring Ads -- Writing Assignment: Advertisements -- Student Essays Exploring Advertisements -- "Healthy Hayes" / Kristen Westdorp -- "Dare to Bare It All" / Ashley Yuill -- Cartoons -- Cartoons and creativity -- Creativity and humor -- Serious cartoons -- Editorial cartoons -- Special Considerations for Exploring Cartoons -- Writing Assignment: Cartoons -- Student Essays Exploring Cartoons -- "Overspending" / Alyssa Huntoon -- Brett Sanborn "On the Watch" -- Film -- Writing about a film -- Writing Assignment: Film Review -- Guidelines for writing a film review -- Before you do research Note continued: Finding and synthesizing sources -- Student Film Review -- "Slumdog Millionaire Wins More Than Money" / Sarah Krumrie -- ch. 7 Critical Thinking about Poetry and Fiction -- Reading and Writing about Poetry -- "My Papa's Waltz" / Theodore Roethke -- The language of poetry -- "A narrow Fellow in the Grass" / Emily Dickinson -- Elements of poetry -- Diction -- Imagery -- "Root Cellar" / Theodore Roethke -- Figures of speech: metaphors, similes, and symbols -- "Metaphors" / Sylvia Plath -- Tone -- Speaker -- Sound patterns -- Structure -- Line breaks -- Reading Notebook -- "Traveling through the Dark" / William Stafford -- Writing Assignment: An Essay about a Poem -- Student essay exploring a poem -- "Those Winter Sundays" / Robert Hayden -- "Kindness in the 'Blueblack Cold'" / Ryan Lampman -- Poems to Consider for Writing an Essay -- "The Summer Day" / Mary Oliver -- "Splitting an Order" / Ted Kooser -- "Heaven, 1963" / Kim Nogiega -- "Vocations Club" / Paula Sergi -- "Work Boots: Still Life" / Jim Daniels -- "May" / Bruce Weigl -- "Upon Seeing the Ultrasound Photo of an Unborn Child" / Thomas Lux -- "Red Roses" / Anne Sexton -- "Mother to Son" / Langston Hughes -- "Famous" / Naomi Shihab Nye -- Reading and Writing about Fiction -- "Lights" / Stuart Dybek -- "Maroon" / Stuart Dybek -- "Flying Out with the Wounded" / Anne Caston -- Elements of fiction -- Plot and conflict -- Character -- Point of view -- Setting -- Moral issues -- Writing Assignment: An Essay about a Story -- Stories to Consider for Writing an Essay -- "The Story of an Hour" / Kate Chopin -- "Popular Mechanics" / Raymond Carver -- "Shotgun Wedding" / Bonnie Jo Campbell -- "Pet Milk" / Stuart Dybek -- ch. 8 Research Strategies -- Research Writing Options -- The report -- The argument paper -- It May Feel Like a Mountain of Information -- Strategy One: Using Subject-Specific Encyclopedias -- Preliminary reading and locating your research question -- Strategy Two: Looking for Books -- Library catalog -- Critical thinking in a research notebook -- Taking notes -- Strategy Three: Looking for Articles -- Using databases -- Differences between magazines and journals -- An advantage of journals -- Newspaper articles and online archives -- Divide your work into steps or phases -- Strategy Four: Government Documents and Statistics -- Biographical sources -- Book reviews -- Strategy Five: Doing Some Field Research -- Guidelines for interviews -- Writing Assignment: Research Proposal -- Example of research proposal -- ch. 9 Evaluating Evidence -- Scholarship and the Wikipedia Dilemma -- "A Stand against Wikipedia" / Scott Jaschik -- "Why I Won't Get Hired at Middlebury" / T. Mills Kelly -- Research and the Internet -- What Is a Reliable Web Site? -- Criteria for Web sites -- Who Is the Author? -- Identifying authors -- Watch out for false and impartial authorities -- Reliable Information: On the Web and Off -- Context -- Timely data -- Documentation and credibility -- Hoaxes and frauds -- Understanding Evidence in Research Writing -- Claim -- Persuasive appeals -- Questioning evidence -- Primary and secondary evidence -- Remaining impartial -- Information without attribution -- Evaluating statistical data -- Writing Assignment: Annotated Bibliography -- Example of annotated bibliography -- Going beyond the Information Given -- "Save the Darfur Puppy" / Nicholas D. Kristof -- Writing Assignment: Exploring an Article by Doing Research from It -- "Teens Can Multitask, But What Are Costs?" / Lori Aratani -- "Premarital Abstinence Pledges Ineffective, Study Finds" / Rob Stein -- "Researchers Find Study of Medical Marijuana Discouraged" / Gardiner Harris -- ch. 10 Writing Your Reseach Paper -- Researchers as Writers -- Working through your project -- Discovering order -- Shaping your thesis -- Substantiating your data -- Understanding your audience -- Controlling your voice -- Using tools of style -- Using persuasive appeals -- Taking your time -- Using Sources: In-Text Citation -- Using author's name within a sentence -- Using author's name in parentheses -- Using signal phrases with direct quotes -- Using direct quotes for words, phrases, and sentences -- How to use long quotes -- Vary the way you use direct quotes -- Using blended quotations within your own sentences -- Commas and periods go inside quotation marks -- Using colons and semicolons with quotation marks -- Using single quotation marks -- Using quotation marks around words used in a special sense -- Using an ellipsis mark to indicate omission of words -- Using brackets to add your own words in a quote -- Using "sic" to indicate errors in quotes -- When it is appropriate to use direct quotes -- Common knowledge -- Plagiarism, Summarizing, and Paraphrasing -- Writing a Report -- A model report -- "Too Much, Too Little, and All the Wrong Kinds: Malnutrition and Obesity among American Children" / Margo Krzemecki Brines -- Organizing reports -- The Formal Outline -- The preliminary outline -- The formal outline model -- Apply What You Have Learned in Earlier Chapters -- Works Cited or References -- The bibliography rule -- A Model Argument Paper -- "Grass or Grain: What's the Beef?" / Ryan Lampman -- ch. 11 Documentation: MLA and APA -- Directory to MLA Works Cited Models -- In-text rules -- Books -- Periodicals -- Online sources -- Other sources -- Guidelines for References in Your Text: MLA Style -- 1.Using author's name and signal phrase -- 2.Using author's name in parentheses -- 3.Using sources with two or three authors -- 4.Using sources with four or more authors -- 5.Using a committee or group author -- 6.Using authors with the same last name -- 7.Using an unknown author -- 8.Using a source quoted in another source -- 9.Using shortened titles -- 10.Using a Web source with no page numbers -- 11.Using a source that is one page -- 12.Citing page numbers -- 13.Using works with numbered sections or lines -- 14.Using publishers' names -- 15.Using copyright date -- Book: MLA Basic Works Cited Model -- Books: MLA Works Cited Models -- 16.One author -- 17.More than one book by same author -- 18.Author of one book, coauthor of another -- 19.Committee or group author -- 20.Book with editor(s) -- 21.Selection in an anthology or an edited work -- 22.Translation -- 23.Multivolume work -- 24.Republished work -- 25.Publisher imprint -- 26.Edition -- Citing a Periodical -- 27.Introduction, preface, foreword -- 28.Bible, sacred works -- 29.Dictionary -- 30.Specialized encyclopedia -- Periodical: MLA Basic Works Cited Model -- Periodicals: MLA Works Cited Models -- 31.Weekly magazine article -- 32.Magazine article, no author given -- 33.Monthly magazine article -- 34.Journal article, each issue starting with page 1 -- 35.Journal article, pages numbered continuously throughout year -- 36.Newspaper article -- 37.Newspaper article, unsigned -- 38.Editorial -- 39.Letter to the editor in magazine or newspaper -- 40.Book review -- 41.Film review -- 42.Music review -- Citing a Work from a Database -- Online Sources: MLA Works Cited Models -- 43.Article from an online magazine -- 44.Article from an online journal -- 45.Article from an online newspaper -- 46.An entire Web site -- 47.Article, chapter or section from a Web site -- 48.Work from an online database -- 49.Online book -- 50.Part of an online book -- 51.Online government publication -- 52.CD-ROM -- 53.E-mail -- 54.Blog site -- 55.Blog entry -- Other Sources: MLA Works Cited Models -- 56.Handout or unpublished essay -- 57.Lecture, speech, public address -- 58.Film -- 59.Video recording: film or television -- 60.Television show -- 61.Play, performance -- 62.Musical performance -- 63.Musical recording -- 64.Individual selection from a recording -- 65.Work of art -- 66.Poem published separately -- 67.Poem in a collection -- 68.Personal interview -- 69.Telephone interview -- 70.Published interview -- 71.A chart, diagram, map, or table -- 72.A cartoon -- 73.An advertisement -- MLA Guidelines for Manuscript Format -- APA Style: Name and Date Method of Documentation -- Directory to APA Works Cited Models -- Books -- Periodicals -- Online sources -- Other sources -- Guidelines for References in Your Text: APA Style -- 1.Using sources with one author -- 2.Using sources with two authors -- 3.Using sources with three to five authors -- 4.Using sources with six or more authors -- 5.Using an unknown author -- 6.Using a committee or group with a long name -- 7.Using two authors With same last name -- 8.Using same author, same year -- 9.Using multiple references -- 10.Using a source quoted in another source -- 11.Using a long quote -- References List in APA Style -- Book: APA Basic Reference Form -- Books: APA Reference List Models -- 12.One author -- 13.More than one book by same author -- 14.Author of one book, coauthor of another -- 15.Two or more authors -- 16.Committee or group author -- 17.Book with editor(s) -- 18.Article or chapter in an edited work -- 19.Translation -- 20.Multivolume work -- 21.Reprint of older work -- 22.Edition other than the first -- 23.Introduction, preface, foreword -- 24.Dictionary -- Periodical: APA Basic Works Cited Model -- Periodicals: APA Reference List Models -- 25.Journal article, each issue starting with page 1 -- 26.Journal article, pages numbered continuously throughout year -- 27.Weekly magazine article -- 28.Magazine article, no author given -- 29.Monthly magazine article -- 30.Newspaper article -- 31.Newspaper article, unsigned -- 32.Editorial, signed and unsigned -- 33.Letter to the editor -- Online Sources: APA Reference List Models -- 34.Article from a journal, print source -- 35.Article from an online journal, no print source -- 36.Article from an online magazine -- 37.Article from an online newspaper -- 38.Work from an online database -- 39.Online government publication -- 40.Blog -- Other Sources: APA Reference List Models -- 41.Book review -- 42.Film review -- 43.Motion picture: film, video, or DVD Note continued: 44.Television broadcast -- APA Guidelines for Manuscript Format -- A Model Research Paper Using APA Style -- "Saturated by Color" / Mary Ellen Wendt.

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9780205834457; 0205834450
    RVK Klassifikation: HF 330
    Auflage/Ausgabe: 4th edition
    Schlagworte: Critical thinking; English language; Persuasion (Rhetoric); Report writing; Critical thinking; English language ; Style; Persuasion (Rhetoric); Report writing
    Umfang: xxiv, 552 pages, illustrations (certaines en couleur), 23 cm
    Bemerkung(en):

    Bibliographie: p. 527-533

  18. Jahrbuch der Brüder Grimm-Gesellschaft
    Erschienen: 1991-2019
    Verlag:  Brüder Grimm-Gesellschaft e.V., Kassel

    Universitätsbibliothek J. C. Senckenberg, Zentralbibliothek (ZB)
    HM 5: J 274
    1.1991 -
    keine Ausleihe von Bänden, nur Papierkopien werden versandt
    Universitätsbibliothek J. C. Senckenberg, Bibliothekszentrum Geisteswissenschaften (BzG)
    schwarz RG 202
    1.1991 - 5.1995
    keine Fernleihe
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    Quelle: Fachkatalog AVL
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Medientyp: Zeitschrift, Zeitung
    Format: Druck
    ISSN: 0941-1879
    RVK Klassifikation: EC 1030 ; GB 2708 ; GA 1000
    DDC Klassifikation: Literaturen germanischer Sprachen; Deutsche Literatur (830); Literaturen germanischer Sprachen; Deutsche Literatur (830)
    Körperschaften/Kongresse:
    Brüder-Grimm-Gesellschaft (Verfasser)
    Weitere Schlagworte: Grimm, Jacob (1785-1863); Grimm, Wilhelm (1786-1859); Grimm Familie : 18.-19. Jh.
    Umfang: 25 cm
    Bemerkung(en):

    Ersch. unregelmäßig

  19. The modernist God state
    a literary study of the Nazis' Christian Reich
  20. Historical dictionary of Holocaust cinema
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Scarecrow Press, Lanham, Md.

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    Hinweise zum Inhalt
    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Reimer, Carol J. (Mitwirkender)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9780810867567; 0810867567
    Schriftenreihe: Historical dictionaries of literature and the arts
    Schlagworte: Judenvernichtung <Motiv>; Film
    Weitere Schlagworte: (lcsh)Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in motion pictures--Dictionaries.
    Umfang: XXIV, 247 S., Ill., 24 cm
    Bemerkung(en):

    Literaturangaben

  21. Laughter in the trenches
    humour and front experience in German First World War narratives
    Autor*in: Kazecki, Jakub
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Cambridge Scholars Publ., Newcastle upon Tyne

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9781443838993; 1443838993
    Auflage/Ausgabe: 1. publ.
    Schlagworte: Deutsch; Prosa; Kriegsliteratur; Weltkrieg <1914-1918, Motiv>; Humor
    Weitere Schlagworte: (lcsh)German fiction--History and criticism--20th century.; (lcsh)World War, 1939-1945--Literature and the war.; (lcsh)Humor in literature.
    Umfang: 199 S., 22 cm
    Bemerkung(en):

    Literaturangaben

  22. Egy magyar a két Németországban
    Autor*in: Hodonyi, Jenő
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Accordia K., Budapest

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Ungarisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9786155069345
    Schlagworte: Literatur; Ungarisch; Literatur
    Umfang: 448 S., 20 cm
  23. Les camps nazis
    réflexions sur la réception littéraire française
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Classiques Garnier, Paris

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Französisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9782812406195; 2812406194
    Schriftenreihe: Littérature, histoire, politique ; 2
    Schlagworte: Französisch; Literatur; Judenvernichtung <Motiv>; Konzentrationslager <Motiv>
    Weitere Schlagworte: (lcsh)French literature--20th century--History and criticism.; (lcsh)French literature--21st century--History and criticism.; (lcsh)Concentration camps in literature.; (lcsh)Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature.
    Umfang: 616 S., 22 cm
    Bemerkung(en):

    Literaturangaben

  24. Sacrifice in the modern world
    on the particularity and generality of Nazi myth
    Autor*in: Pan, David
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Northwestern Univ. Press, Evanston, Ill.

  25. Housebound
    selfhood and domestic space in contemporary German fiction
    Autor*in: Shafi, Monika
    Erschienen: 2012
    Verlag:  Camden House, Rochester, NY

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Buch (Monographie)
    Format: Druck
    ISBN: 9781571135247; 1571135243
    Auflage/Ausgabe: 1. publ.
    Schriftenreihe: Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
    Schlagworte: Deutsch; Literatur; Haus <Motiv>; Privatheit <Motiv>; Zuhause <Motiv>
    Weitere Schlagworte: (lcsh)German fiction--20th century--History and criticism.; (lcsh)Home in literature.; (lcsh)Self in literature.; (lcsh)Domestic relations in literature.
    Umfang: XIV, 223 S., 24 cm
    Bemerkung(en):

    Literaturangaben