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Diese Studie - Teil der Gesamtevaluation eines BLK-Modellversuchs - verfolgt das Ziel der Analyse und Veränderung von Musikunterricht. Die Untersuchungsfrage lautet: Welchen Einfluss hat Musikunterricht, realisiert in verschiedenen Varianten - insbesondere unter Einbezug des Instrumentlernens -, auf die Entwicklung unterschiedlicher musikalischer Fähigkeiten bei Zehn- bis Zwölfjährigen. Angelegt als quasi-experimenteller Vergleich werden Aussagen gewonnen zur Entwicklung von re-produktiven, kognitiven (Hören, Wissen, Anwenden) und sensorisch-rezeptorischen musikalischen Fähigkeiten. Die aufwendige Konstruktion von informellen Lern- und Leistungstests in Form von Gruppen- und Individualtests erlaubt teils erstmalig die Untersuchung komplexer Fähigkeiten musikalischer Ausübung. Weitere, auch standardisierte Tests und Befragungen werden u.a. zur Ermittlung der Kovariaten für die inferenzstatistischen Verfahren einbezogen und dokumentiert. Die Forschungsfragen werden in Kontexte entwicklungspschologischer Befunde, handlungsorientierter Theorie sowie in lern- und bildungstheoretische Zusammenhänge gestellt. Aus den Ergebnissen werden musikdidaktische und bildungspolitische Konsequenzen formuliert, wobei der Begriff „musikalische Grundkompetenz“ eine zentrale Rolle spielt.
This study aims primarily at exploring the images of Swahili women as depicted in taarab songs in Zanzibar and factors that shape these images at different epochs or points in time. The corpus used in this study was collected in Zanzibar from Sep- tember to November 1999. A secondary concern of the present study is to highlight the history of taarab songs in Zanzibar and to identify the relationship between this art of songs and the Egyptian song. The study has adopted a holistic approach with more concentration on sung lyrics. The analysis is des- criptive and utilizes perspectives of literary theories of orature as well as insights from gender, cultural, structural and functional theories. The present study argues that Swahili taarab songs belong to the realm of oral literature, though in this case not in the sense of “classical oral literature”which excludes the notion of literacy. In taarab, the songs combine together features of both oral and written literature. They reflect comprehensively the Swahili culture and are thus con- sidered by the Swahili themselves as an indigenous genre of music despite its Arabian and other foreign roots. The study highlights the cultural milieu of taarab songs in Zanzibar and explores metaphors, symbols referring to women, and the sources of imagery used in these songs. Taarab songs have stylistically developed through their history. The study identifies two categories of classical taarab songs each of which has its own distinctive characteristics. The first category concerns those songs sung for the first time before 1945, and the second one those sung afterwards. Taarab lyrics have distinctive features, which they have acquired over time through efforts of the Swahili creative artists. They adhere
strictly to the conditions and conventions of Swahili traditio nal poetic structure. The lyrics have enriched the Swahili language with a lot of expressions, which came in use firstly through taarab lyrics. The various facets of the taarab com- plex, including prominent features of taarab performance- and the salient linguistic aspects of taarab lyrics, have also
been discussed.
Während seiner mittlerweile über 30jährigen Auseinandersetzung mit dem Porträt gelangte Vollrad Kutscher zu der Erkenntnis, dass es unmöglich ist, in unserer Zeit ein gültiges Bild von sich selbst und in der Folge von anderen zu erstellen. Dass Kutscher dennoch immer wieder Porträts herstellt, zeigt einen Widerspruch auf, der sich leitmotivisch durch die Arbeiten zieht und in ihnen selbst formal manifestiert ist. ...
Die Tätigkeit des Forschens, denke ich, hat immer etwas mit Neugier auf die Welt zu tun; eine Welt, in der wir leben, und eine, in der wir leben könnten. Sie ist verknüpft mit dem Wunsch, Unbekanntes zu erfahren, erkennbar und vielleicht auch nutzbar zu machen. Wenn wir forschen, greifen wir nach Möglichkeiten und nach Zukünftigem, was wir gleichzeitig durch unsere Vorstellungen antizipieren und mit wissenschaftlichen Begriffen umrahmen. Die kulturanthropologische Forschung untersucht Fremdes gewöhnlich in einer anderen Gemeinschaft. Diese Gemeinschaft wird dann zumeist aufgesucht, um zu erfahren, welche Möglichkeiten und welche Probleme für Kulturanthropologen in solchen Kulturkontakten in Erscheinung treten. Die vorliegende Arbeit nun ist eine Forschung über die Forschung. Die Neugier, die mich dazu bewegt hat, sie zu schreiben, bestand in der Frage, wie Möglichkeiten menschlicher Kreativität von Leuten, die dafür Technologien entwickeln, fruchtbar gemacht werden. Die Technologiegestalter suchen eben diese Neugier zu befriedigen, indem sie menschliches Verhalten in künstlich hergestellten Kontexten erproben und Modelle entwerfen, die in die gesellschaftliche Welt einwandern und ausstrahlen sollen. ...
Since 2009 has the central Nigerian Nok Culture – until then primarily known for its highly artistic terracotta figurines and early evidence of iron working in the first millennium BCE – been the focus of a research project by the Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, Germany. The analysis of Nok sculptures has so far been almost entirely restricted to their stylistic features which show such great similarities that one hypothesis of the Frankfurt project has been the possible central production of these artfully crafted figurines.
This volume, written within the scope of a dissertation project completed in 2015, challenges this hypothesis by using scientific materials analysis. Combining the results of the mineralogical and geochemical analyses as well as geographic and geological observations, an alternative model for the organisation and procedure of the manufacture of the famous Nok terracottas is suggested.
They were – as the domestic pottery that is used for comparison and differentiation in this study – manufactured with locally available raw materials (clay and temper) but in different manufacturing sequences with regard to temper and clay composition. The terracottas’ clay was obviously reserved for their production only, demonstrating – aside from stylistic similarities – the value these figurines had during the Nok Culture.
Whereas many writers across all times and cultures have written about the potential aesthetic effects of music experiences which could be labeled as absorption, only limited empirical research has been done on the state aspects of this fascinating aspect of human involvement. What is more, there are still few tested models which explain how people can be absorbed by a piece of music as well as continue to be third-person observers monitoring and even reflecting on that same musical experience (cf. Bryant & Veroff, 2007; Dewey, 2005; Wolf, 2013).
Adopting a dual process approach (Dietrich, 2004; Evans & Stanovich, 2013; Lewis, Tamborini & Weber, 2014; Mukhopadhyay, 2014; Schwarz, 2011; Smith & Neumann, 2005) – in which human thinking, emotion, and routes to appraisal are defined in terms of an interplay between two distinct systems of psychological processing – this thesis aimed to examine a) the cognitive mechanisms underlying the essential yet poorly understood paradox of losing oneself in the music on the one hand, and the act of meta-awareness (i.e., rational and controlled sense of self) on the other, b) its corresponding psycho-phenomenological profile(s) when listening intentionally to self-chosen music, and c) the different potential of state and trait aspects of absorption and meta-awareness in predicting three indicators of the aesthetic response to music: enjoyment (a purely pleasurable response), lasting impression (a meaningful response related to mixed emotion), and behavioral intention (future-planned seeking/ avoidance response). Moreover, a dynamically-conceived conceptualization of absorption was proposed in terms of a temporary phase taking place amidst a variety of other cognitive responses to music, including concentration, mind wandering, and mindfulness. Finally, a questionnaire commonly-used for assessing alterations in consciousness (Phenomenology of Consciousness Inventory; Pekala, 1991) was evaluated in the context of music listening, before using it in the development of a self-report questionnaire aimed at measuring absorptive states in or by music. To this end, a quantitative empirical research method (state and trait questionnaires) was employed in a series of online surveys, using self-selected music as well as pre-determined music by the researcher as stimulus, together approaching a naturalistic listening setting.
Situated within an overarching neurocognitive model for music engagement and consistent with several aesthetic theories converging (Benson, 1993; Dewey, 2005; Wolf, 2013), aesthetic absorption was conceptualized as, and later confirmed to be, structured by experiential and meta-consciousness or – in terms of dual process terminology – intuitive type I and reflective type II processing. Two forms of music absorption were empirically identified and labeled as zoning in and tuning in (cf. Schooler, 2007). These experience profiles distinguished themselves significantly in terms of the degree in which a music listener maintained his or her meta-awareness, assessed via volitional control, rationality, self-awareness, and memory of the previous event. The overall pattern of consciousness parameters of both types of absorbed listening are suggestive of a unique interchanging between brain networks for intuitive processing and areas related to self-reference, -awareness and -control. The distinction between zoning in and tuning in was further found to be strongly related to the quality of affective state (i.e., positive vs. mixed emotions). These emotions modulate the experiential intensity of absorption, suggesting this experience to be an affect-biased type of attention. Based on the feelings-as-information theory (Schwarz, 2011), postulating that positive emotions (e.g., happiness) are differently processed than negatively-tinted types of emotions (e.g., nostalgia), it was concluded that music-induced rumination (a negatively-valenced experience related to the self and represented by the feeling of sadness) ‘competes’ with higher-order functions relevant to meta-awareness. From this perspective, the two found absorption types match conceptually with the positively-tinged self-reflection and negatively-tinged self-rumination as two different types of self-focused introspection (Takano & Tanno, 2009; Trapnell & Campbell, 1999). Further examining the construct’s latent structure, it was shown that being absorbed by music is a continuous phenomenon; a matter of ‘more-or-less’ involvement rather than a ‘unique state of mind’. This finding cautions against subtyping absorption experiences as being qualitatively distinct, and assuming it to be guided by ‘special’ mechanisms. Consequently, determining ‘music absorbers’ is a matter of imprecise estimation rather than being marked by a clear observable onset. Finally, as expected, an absorbed state of mind – operationalized here as a multidimensional bifactor model – completely mediated the effect of trait absorption, and was a good predictor for enjoyment, lasting impression, and behavioral intention. Whereas absorption and enjoyment were found to have a mutual positive effect on each other, absorption and meta-awareness were found to be unrelated to each other. Also, meta-awareness contributed little to aesthetic appreciation. The results confirm the need for a dynamic approach to the relationship between state absorption and enjoyment; the one-directional approach common in many research reports does not seem to fully capture the relationship between them. Future research should examine whether the same applies for absorption and meta-awareness, preferably making use of more advanced measures for the latter.
Taken together, this dissertation shows the potential of including the interplay between the trait and state constructs of absorption and meta-awareness in order to better understand the mechanisms underlying aesthetic experiences with music. The present work demonstrated that these two constructs should not be conflated, but, in terms of dual processing, that they represent different levels of consciousness. Moreover, this thesis underlined the power of absorption not only to evoke short-lived pleasurable experiences, but also to stimulate long-lasting impressions. Knowing more about absorbed listening and its potential effects, learning to consciously recognize it as it happens, and perhaps regulate and maintain its positive consequences (i.e., savoring), could further improve the way we engage ourselves with music or other aesthetic objects. Only then could we engage in behavior that we’re sure would make us happy rather than seeking out experiences which we hope would make us happy.
Finally, dual process approach and measures provided by research on altered-states-of-consciousness (ASC) experiences offer new and fruitful perspectives to conceptualize aesthetic absorption and examine its mechanisms. Several major research questions lie ahead in understanding the phenomenological experience and aesthetic role of absorption, including the future comparison between subjective experiences of ASCs across varying music and non-music induction methods (e.g., hypnosis), listening conditions (e.g., live concert experience), and musical ‘cultures’ (human societies, musical styles, classes).
Whereas many writers across all times and cultures have written about the potential aesthetic effects of music experiences which could be labeled as absorption, only limited empirical research has been done on the state aspects of this fascinating aspect of human involvement. What is more, there are still few tested models which explain how people can be absorbed by a piece of music as well as continue to be third-person observers monitoring and even reflecting on that same musical experience.
Adopting a dual process approach – in which human thinking, emotion, and routes to appraisal are defined in terms of an interplay between two distinct systems of psychological processing – this thesis aimed to examine a) the cognitive mechanisms underlying the paradox of losing oneself in the music on the one hand, and meta-awareness on the other, b) its corresponding psychophenomenological profile(s) when listening intentionally to self-chosen music, and c) the different potential of state and trait aspects of absorption and meta-awareness in predicting three indicators of the aesthetic response to music: enjoyment, lasting impression, and behavioral intention.
To this end, a quantitative empirical research method (state and trait questionnaires) was employed in a series of online surveys, using self-selected music as well as pre-determined music by the researcher as stimulus, together approaching a naturalistic listening setting.Aesthetic absorption was confirmed to be structured– in terms of dual process terminology – by intuitive type I and reflective type II processing. Two forms of music absorption were empirically
identified and labeled as zoning in and tuning in. These experience profiles distinguished themselves significantly in terms of the degree in which a music listener maintained his or her meta-awareness, assessed via volitional control, rationality, self-awareness, and memory of the previous event. The overall pattern of consciousness parameters of both types of absorbed listening are suggestive of a unique interchanging between brain networks for intuitive processing and areas related to self-reference, -awareness and -control. The distinction between zoning in and tuning in was further found to be strongly related to the quality of affective state.
These emotions modulate the experiential intensity of absorption, suggesting this experience to be an affect-biased type of attention. Based on the feelings-as-information theory, postulating that positive emotions are differently processed than negatively-tinted types of emotions, it was
concluded that music-induced rumination ‘competes’ with higher-order functions relevant to meta-awareness. From this perspective, the two found absorption types match conceptually with the positively-tinged self-reflection and negatively-tinged self-rumination as two different types of self-focused introspection. It was also shown that being absorbed by music is a continuous phenomenon; a matter of ‘more-or-less’ involvement rather than a ‘unique state of mind’. Consequently, determining ‘music absorbers’ is a matter of imprecise estimation rather than being marked by a clear observable onset. Finally, as expected, an absorbed state of mind - operationalized here as a multidimensional bifactor model – completely mediated the effect of trait absorption, and was a good predictor for enjoyment, lasting impression, and behavioral intention.
Whereas absorption and enjoyment were found to have a mutual positive effect on each other, absorption and meta-awareness were found to be unrelated to each other. Also, meta-awareness contributed little to aesthetic appreciation. The results confirm the need for a dynamic approach to the relationship between state absorption and enjoyment; the one-directional approach common in many research reports does not seem to fully capture the relationship between them. Taken together, this dissertation shows the potential of including the interplay between the trait and state constructs of absorption and meta-awareness in order to better understand the mechanisms underlying aesthetic experiences with music. The present work demonstrated that these two constructs should not be conflated. Moreover, this thesis underlined the power of absorption not only to evoke short-lived pleasurable experiences, but also to stimulate longlasting impressions. Knowing more about absorbed listening and its potential effects, learning to consciously recognize it as it happens, and perhaps regulate and maintain its positive consequences (i.e., savoring), could further improve the way we engage ourselves with music or other aesthetic objects. Only then could we engage in behavior that we’re sure would make us happy rather than seeking out experiences which we hope would make us happy.
This dissertation examines the language of politics of leading figures of the ex-Free Aceh Movement or Gerakan Aceh Merdeka‟ (GAM) leading figures in selected Aceh media during the 2012 gubernatorial election campaign. By analyzing their symbolic acts, topic selection, campaign methods, and campaign locations as reported in five selected Aceh media, I demonstrate the process of ex-GAM political rhetoric in the post-conflict election setting. The mixed method approach used in the dissertation includes the following: grounded, content analysis, case study, and rhetorical analysis. Data were collected from three local daily broadsheet newspapers (Serambi Indonesia, Rakyat Aceh and Harian Aceh) and two online news portals (The Atjeh Post and The Globe Journal). The research found that ex-GAM political rhetoric was deeply divided into two opposing political camps: the Irwandi camp as the incumbent independent and the PA camp as the challenger from a newly-established local political party. Both camps highlighted the importance of expressive symbolic acts, such as explaining and making promises in their campaigns. Irwandi introduced more varied, specific, practical, and concrete topics in its rhetoric with diverse and less formal campaign methods that appealed to those who envision a prosperous future in Aceh. By contrast, PA employed general, unrealistic, and abstract topics in its rhetoric with less attractive and more formal campaign methods that appealed to emotional and historical romanticism. In relation to ex-GAM political rhetoric and campaign locations, both focused on the traditional regions in northeast Aceh or in the conflict-sensitive regions where most of their loyalists reside, and on big regencies/cities where the potential voters live. However, during the campaign Irwandi appeared less frequently in ethnically diverse locations, whereas PA appeared more in non-traditional regions such as the previously isolated and less-developed regions in the central highlands and southeast regions of Aceh. In this way they highlighted the rhetoric of economic and infrastructure development and that of unity in diversity taking into account the multi-ethnicity of the voters. In terms of overall media appearances, except in The Atjeh Post, where Muzakir Manaf from PA was dominant, Irwandi Yusuf was the most-reported ex-GAM during the election campaign in the selected media. Finally, the available evidence seems to suggest that Irwandi‘s language of politics was rhetorically more attractive than that of other ex-GAM leaders.
Bei der 1590 datierten Monstranz mit Reliquien der Passion Christi handelt es sich um das zentrale Stück des ab dem frühen 17. Jahrhunderts in der Geheimen Cammerkapelle der Residenz München aufbewahrten Reliquienschatzes, den die bayerischen Herzöge Wilhelm V. und Maximilian I. als ihren kostbarsten Besitz ansahen. Die über 1,15 m hohe Monstranz aus getriebenen und gegossenem Silberteilen und graviertem Glas ist sehr reich mit goldgeschmelzten Figuren und Ornamentapplikationen, mit gefassten Smaragden, Rubinen, Diamanten und Perlen verziert. Sie kann als ein bedeutendes Monument der süddeutschen Goldschmiedekunst aber auch der konfessionellen Politik der Herzöge von Bayern gelten, die mit der Reliquienverehrung eine von der Reformation verdammte Kultpraxis propagierten. Die Arbeit diskutiert zuerst die relevante kunsthistorische Literatur. Dann wird die Bedeutung der Reliquien, das ikonographische Programm und die Funktion der Monstranz als Kultmittel des kirchlich geleiteten Reliquienkults und dessen Ausprägung am Münchner Hof um 1600 – im Speziellen innerhalb der Geheimen Cammerkapelle – betrachtet. Die Reliquienmonstranz war nicht nur Ausdruck der Frömmigkeit, sondern Teil einer Repräsentationsstrategie der Herzöge und soll daher auch im Zusammenhang mit anderen wichtigen Elementen der fürstlichen Selbstdarstellung gesehen werden. Es schließen sich stilkritische Betrachtungen über die in verschiedenen Goldschmiede- und Juweliertechniken gearbeiteten Bestandteile der Monstranz an. Dabei werden die Treibarbeiten und gegossenen Teile, die Emailkunst und die Art und Weise der Edelsteinfassungen ebenso behandelt, wie die architektonischen oder ornamentalen Verzierungen. Neben der Beurteilung der bisherigen Datierung werden in den stilkritischen Betrachtungen auch eine Gruppe von verwandten Goldschmiedewerken herausarbeitet, die aus derselben Werkstatt stammen dürften. Als Schöpfer der Monstranz wird Georg Bernhard angenommen, der zwar kein zünftiger Meister war, jedoch für den Münchner Hof über viele Jahre meisterliches gearbeitet hat.