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"Ach!" würde Goethe vermutlich ausrufen, sähe er die Kleinteiligkeit der heutigen Forschung – und auch sein Faust verzweifelt am gestaltlosen "Wissensqualm". Goethe wehrt sich vehement gegen eine Zersplitterung der Wissenschaft in unzählige Einzelphänomene. Er schätzt die Universalisten, "die das Allgemeine im Auge haben und gern das Besondere an- und einfügen möchten".
Philologe im "Kriegseinsatz" : der Frankfurter Germanist Julius Petersen und der Erste Weltkrieg
(2014)
Vorlesungen für Studenten und Bildungsangebote für Bürger – wie lässt sich dieser Anspruch der jungen Stiftungsuniversität auch in Zeiten des Krieges realisieren, wenn Professoren wie Studenten ins Feld ziehen müssen? Das Beispiel des Germanisten Julius Petersen zeigt, welche Anstrengungen zwischen 1914 und 1918 unternommen wurden, um "Volksbildung" und "Vaterländischen Unterricht" zu ermöglichen. Dazu gehörten Vorträge an der Front ebenso wie Bürgervorlesungen in der Heimat.
The micro–blogging service Twitter can be used to publicly share information about events that used to be limited to a defined number of participants only. How does this affect different types of formal or semi–formal events, from the university seminar to the council meeting? This paper uses Goffman’s notion of involvement and Lindroth and Bergquist’s notions of alignment and glancing to describe the potential for conflict that this use of Twitter causes, and suggests approaches that may help to avoid or to alleviate conflicts.
As language rhythm relies partly on general acoustic properties, such as intensity and duration, mastering two languages with distinct rhythmic properties (i.e., stress position) may enhance musical rhythm perception. We investigated whether second language (L2) competence affects musical rhythm aptitude in Turkish early (TELG) and late learners (TLLG) of German in comparison to German monolingual speakers (GMC). To account for inter-individual differences, we measured participants’ short-term and working memory capacity, melodic aptitude, and time they spent listening to music. Both L2 speaker groups perceived rhythmic variations significantly better than monolinguals. No differences were found between early and late learners’ performances. Our findings suggest that mastering two languages with different rhythmic properties enhances musical rhythm perception, providing further evidence of cognitive share between language and music.
Event-related potential (ERP) data in monolingual German speakers have shown that sentential metric expectancy violations elicit a biphasic ERP pattern consisting of an anterior negativity and a posterior positivity (P600). This pattern is comparable to that elicited by syntactic violations. However, proficient French late learners of German do not detect violations of metric expectancy in German. They also show qualitatively and quantitatively different ERP responses to metric and syntactic violations. We followed up the questions whether (1) latter evidence results from a potential pitch cue insensitivity in speech segmentation in French speakers, or (2) if the result is founded in rhythmic language differences. Therefore, we tested Spanish late learners of German, as Spanish, contrary to French, uses pitch as a segmentation cue even though the basic segmentation unit is the same in French and Spanish (i.e., the syllable). We report ERP responses showing that Spanish L2 learners are sensitive to syntactic as well as metric violations in German sentences independent of attention to task in a P600 response. Overall, the behavioral performance resembles that of German native speakers. The current data suggest that Spanish L2 learners are able to extract metric units (trochee) in their L2 (German) even though their basic segmentation unit in Spanish is the syllable. In addition Spanish in contrast to French L2 learners of German are sensitive to syntactic violations indicating a tight link between syntactic and metric competence. This finding emphasizes the relevant role of metric cues not only in L2 prosodic but also in syntactic processing.
Metrical patterning and rhyme are frequently employed in poetry but also in infant-directed speech, play, rites, and festive events. Drawing on four line-stanzas from nineteenth and twentieth German poetry that feature end rhyme and regular meter, the present study tested the hypothesis that meter and rhyme have an impact on aesthetic liking, emotional involvement, and affective valence attributions. Hypotheses that postulate such effects have been advocated ever since ancient rhetoric and poetics, yet they have barely been empirically tested. More recently, in the field of cognitive poetics, these traditional assumptions have been readopted into a general cognitive framework. In the present experiment, we tested the influence of meter and rhyme as well as their interaction with lexicality in the aesthetic and emotional perception of poetry. Participants listened to stanzas that were systematically modified with regard to meter and rhyme and rated them. Both rhyme and regular meter led to enhanced aesthetic appreciation, higher intensity in processing, and more positively perceived and felt emotions, with the latter finding being mediated by lexicality. Together these findings clearly show that both features significantly contribute to the aesthetic and emotional perception of poetry and thus confirm assumptions about their impact put forward by cognitive poetics. The present results are explained within the theoretical framework of cognitive fluency, which links structural features of poetry with aesthetic and emotional appraisal.
Auch in Film und Fernsehen erleben Märchen eine Renaissance. Filme knüpfen an das an, was Kindern und Erwachsenen aus mündlicher Überlieferung und Lektüre vertraut ist, und beleben den Stoff auf ihre Art neu. Häufig entsteht daraus ein Genre-Mix aus klassischen Märchen, Mythen und Populärkultur verknüpft mit Fantasy-Elementen.
"Es war 1mal 1 finsterer Wald ..." : Grimms Märchen in der aktuellen Kinder- und Jugendliteratur
(2012)
Was alles unter der literarischen Marke "Märchen" auf dem Kinder- und Jugendbuch-Markt firmiert, ist äußerst variantenreich – vom Wimmelbuch im Großformat bis zum SMS-Märchen in 160 Zeichen. Neben dem üblichen Dauersortiment tun sich auch immer mehr Parallelwelten zu den Grimm'schen Märchen auf: Dazu gehören beispielsweise die Märchen-Lovestories für Mädchen, in denen Märchen-Figuren als Strippenzieherinnen in der realen Welt auftreten, ebenso wie die Einbindung der Brüder Grimm in Jugendthriller. Die Verlage suchen Kontakt zum jungen Publikum. Vielfältige crossmediale Angebote, Apps und Fanclubs im Netz bedienen den modernen Märchen-User.
Der Froschkönig, der eigentlich eine Prinzessin ist, das Schneewittchen, das sich beinahe in einen niedlichen Feenzwerg verliebt, der narzisstische Hänsel, der Klein-Gretel wegen der betörenden Hexe Hildegard im Wald stehen lässt, der Bishônen-Jüngling Rapunzel, der die sportliche Jungfer Eva schwängert – diese Geschichten und einige andere mehr entstammen dem Universum der japanischen Comics des 21. Jahrhunderts. Die Manga haben mittlerweile begeisterte Leser und Nachahmer selbst im Heimatland der Märchenbrüder gefunden.