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Die deutsche Sprache hat schon in mittelhochdeutscher Zeit das Polnische beeinflusst. In der mittelhochdeutschen Zeit beginnt die Ostkolonisation der deutschen Siedler in Schlesien, daher dringen viele deutsche Wörter in die polnische Sprache vor. Eine sehr starke Beeinflussung des Polnischen durch das Deutsche beobachtet man im 19. Jahrhundert, in der Zeit der Industrialisierung in Europa und auch in Polen, obwohl Polen als selbstständiger Staat zu dieser Zeit nicht mehr existierte. Der geschlossene polnische Sprachraum wurde in drei Teile aufgeteilt: Der eine Teil gehörte zu Preußen, der andere Teil zu Österreich und der dritte Teil zu Russland. Der Einfluss der deutschen Sprache zeigt sich im 19. Jahrhundert im gleichen Maße in allen drei Teilungsgebieten Polens, weil der lexikalische Einfluss des Deutschen auf die polnische Sprachenvor allem im Bereich der Technik und Industrie zu Tage tritt. [...] Zu Beginn des 20. Jahrhunderts nach der Wiedererlangung der Unabhängigkeit durch Polen beginnt die Phase der Polonisierung der direkten deutschen Entlehnungen durch Lehnübersetzungen; dennoch haben wir es weiterhin mit dem lexikalischen Einfluss des Deutschen zu tun, der sich nun in Form von Lehnübersetzungen und -übertragungen zeigt.
Neste artigo, trazemos algumas reflexões a respeito da influência exercida por línguas anteriormente aprendidas no processo de aprendizagem de alemão como L3 por aprendizes brasileiros. Essas influências podem operar tanto por meio de transferências linguísticas intencionais, controladas pelos próprios aprendizes, quanto por transferências não intencionais. Dependendo do referencial teórico adotado, essas transferências intencionais são consideradas estratégias de aprendizagem e/ou de comunicação. Com base em uma pesquisa empírica realizada em 2017 e em alguns debates na área acadêmica em torno do assunto (OXFORD 1990, 2011; BIMMEL e RAMPILLON 2000; SELINKER 1972, 2014; HUFEISEN 2010), este artigo tem como objetivo analisar as estratégias utilizadas por aprendizes de alemão como L3 em um chat online e refletir sobre as influências interlinguais exercidas sobre os aprendizes de forma não intencional. Os resultados obtidos apontam para contrastes (1) quanto ao tipo de estratégias utilizadas por aprendizes em diferentes níveis de aprendizagem e (2) quanto à língua da qual decorreram as influências não intencionais: aprendizes mais proficientes utilizaram estratégias que mobilizaram mais elementos da língua-alvo, como os circunlóquios, e não sofreram nenhuma influência exclusivamente da língua materna (apenas da L1 e da L2 concomitantemente ou apenas da L2), ao contrário de aprendizes menos proficientes.
Böll on Joyce, Joyce on Böll : a gnomonical reading of Heinrich Böll's "Die schönsten Füße der Welt"
(1998)
It is my contention - but not my whole argument, as we shall soon see - that this shift or new departure can be attributed in part to Böll's introduction to the work of James Joyce, an event that took place at or around the time when Böll began travelling to Ireland in 1954. Indeed, as if in corroboration of this assumption, the earliest mentionings of Joyce that I have found occur in the second and third episodes of Böll's popular travelogue „Irisches Tagebuch“, published in 1957. It is worth noting, however, that neither of these two comments is formulated in a way that would presuppose more than a superficial knowledge of Joyce's works. And later, too, we find only the occasional allusion to or mention of the lrish writer in Böll's literary work. Nor does Joyce or his œuvre figure prominently in Böll's countless essays and interviews on writers and writing. Even in the short article „Über den Roman“ of 1960, which is devoted to the modern novel and would provide the natural occasion for an acknowledgement of this kind, Böll refers neither to „A Portrait of the Artist as a young Man“ nor to „Ulysses“, not to mention „Finnegans Wake“.
„Great writers,“ those who constitute our canon (at any given moment, one should add warily, since aesthetic canons fluctuate considerably over time), have invariably been the focus of reception studies, partly because they provide the most fertile ground for research, but partly also because literary scholars (and in particular the aspiring doctoral candidate: I myself graduated with an influence /reception study of this kind) need some justification for their endeavors, and what better ticket into the ivory rower - or onto the book market - than the study of the most seminal and widely accepted authors? James Joyce is just such a „great author.“ And „James Joyce and German Literature,“ the subject of this essay, must inevitably result in some form of reception study. But just what form should it take? Within the limited space of one article, it would be impossible to survey in toto Joyce's influence on German literature; that is, the multiple receptions of Joyce by some four or five generations of authors writing in German.