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Wir Philologen haben gut reden. Wir sehen zu, wie andere, die zumeist nicht zu unserer Zunft gehören, die unübersehbare Fülle von Geschriebenem aus seiner jeweiligen Ursprache in alle möglichen Sprachen bringen, und wir verhalten uns dazu als interessierte Zuschauer. Wir haben allen Grund, uns daran zu freuen: Ohne diesen grenzüberschreitenden Waren- und Gedankentausch bliebe das Feld, auf dem wir grasen, enger und parzellierter, als es nach der Intention der Autoren und auch der Sache nach sein müsste. Wir können (sofern wir den nötigen Überblick haben) das loben, was die Übersetzer zu Wege gebracht haben: die Entsprechungen, die sie entdeckt oder erfunden haben, die Kraft, Geschmeidigkeit und Modulationsvielfalt, die sie in ihren Zielsprachen mit Tausenden von einleuchtenden Funden oder mit dem ganzen Ton und Duktus ihrer Übersetzungen erst aktiviert haben. Wenn wir es uns zutrauen, können wir ihnen ins Handwerk pfuschen und einzelne Stellen oder ganze Werke selber übersetzen. Wir können sie kritisieren, wo uns die vorgelegten Übersetzungen zu matt erscheinen oder wo sie sachlich oder stilistisch mehr als nötig ‚hinter dem Original zurückbleiben; wir können Verbesserungsvorschläge machen. Wenn wir Übersetzungen zitieren und es nötig finden, sie abzuwandeln, bewegen wir uns in einer Grauzone zwischen dem Respekt vor dem Übersetzer, der Lust an noch weiteren erkannten Potenzen des Textes und dem Drang, möglichst ‚alles, was wir aus dem Original herausgelesen haben, in der eigenen Sprache den Hörern oder Lesern nahezubringen.
Informed by scholarship on systems of ethnography, on animal studies as well as on German (post)colonialism, this article argues thus principally that Brehm's increasingly popular tales of exotic locales, soon included in high circulation magazines such as "Die Gartenlaube", in the end stand out not so much for their cultural engagement and educational-formative representation of human Otherness and difference. Instead, what makes Brehm's works most remarkable is their simultaneous and until now unnoticed popularization of non-human animals - both exotic and domestic - as part of a discursive formation of 'Germanness' and a European self-understanding. This article highlights in this context the extent in which readers find themselves wondering, given the sheer abundance of animal observations alongside a pervasive absence of humans, whether Brehm's travels constitute a failed foray into ethnography; or whether he intentionally shifted the narrative emphasis from humans to animals in order to strategically stage his explorations as a preparatory text for audiences of his later animals tales. What will ultimately be revealed in place of such seeming opposites is how the modes of perception of a German audience for both Brehm's human and animal subjects were affected through his works by almost interchangeable modes of ethnographic and zoographic representation. As a result, Brehm's works raise central questions about the synchronic and diachronic reception of his views on animals as humans and vice versa, all of which culminated in a distinct sense of superiority shared by Brehm and a receptive German audience. What impact this perception may then have had on ensuing German discourses on race, nation, and colonial expansion will be a final consideration of this article as it looks at Brehm's contemporary relevance in widely publicized events in Germany and the United States.
Opponents of World Literature fear that its advent marks the end of the 'work of literature'. J. M. Coetzee's "The Childhood of Jesus" (2013) presents a world in which the work of literature has indeed been forgotten. Migrants arrive in a new life 'washed clean' of the burden of the European tradition. Simón, who dimly recalls the old life, feels that something is missing in the new. He longs for something altogether 'other'. Might Simón learn from the exceptional child David to perceive the 'likeness' in this world? Are we to read Coetzee's novel like Simón or like David - and with what consequence for our understanding of the work of literature in a time of World Literature?
This paper deals with Kant’s differentiation between artistic beauty and the sublime in nature. In this latter, Kant subsumes everything wild, uncultivated, inanimate and makes it – apparently – available to Aesthetics. As the quintessence of resistence, the "stone" stands for everything that remains the most estranged from the human sphere. In texts of Romantic authors such as Novalis, it can be seen how the "stone" in its turn takes possession of human beings and move them away from human nature. From Romanticism up to contemporary art, the sublime establishes thus a dominion of total alterity, which evades control and keeps consciousness alert to the fact that also in human beings there is an uncontrollable element demanding its rights.
O olhar estrangeiro
(1998)
This text tries to illustrate what we understand by strangeness, alterity and exotopy. From the point of view of a stranger, we, as Brazilians, see and read products of foreign cultures in an exotopic way, which is quite productive. The same occurs with Germans looking at US, which gives us another view of ourselves. As an illustration, the poem "calypso" from Ernst Jandl will be discussed in this context.
From the very beginning literary discourse plays a decisive role in the context of colonial discourse of power. Even Anna Seghers, a progressive socialist authoress with a fixation on the Enlightenment, the French Revolution and the Jewish-Christian tradition is unable to detach herself from the European claim on universality. In a tensely opposed relationship of projection and otherness, of "memoria" and intertextuality, Heiner Müller, however, understands literature in the sense of Emanuel Lévina's respect for the other being as a work on difference.
O presente artigo parte da compreensão de que os processos de ensino-aprendizagem (no exemplo em questão, o ensino de Alemão como Língua Estrangeira), bem como o andamento de uma aula, são guiados tanto por fatores objetivos (métodos, abordagens, exercícios e testes passíveis de mensuração), quanto por subjetivos. Ao contrário da Didática, que privilegia um viés objetivo, fatos como interferências pessoais, sobretudo voltadas à figura do mestre, influenciam determinantemente a aprendizagem, a ponto de gerar bloqueios e mobilizar os sentimentos dos aprendizes. Tais aspectos podem ser explicados pelo conceito Freudiano de Transferência, nascido na clínica psicanalítica. Outro conceito psicanalítico relevante é a Sublimação, um dos destinos produtivos e socialmente aceitos da Pulsão. Dessa forma, o ensino e a aprendizagem configuram-se como atividades sublimatórias por excelência e que, por isso, de acordo com a visão desenvolvida nesse artigo, devem ser estimuladas pelo mestre, objetivando uma aprendizagem mais consciente e crítica, em sintonia com os desafios educativos do século XXI. Além de "psicanalisar" e desconstruir o processo pedagógico, o artigo situa-se na concepção de uma sala de aula dialógica, com mestres que aprendem e que se constituem a partir da linguagem e do confronto com a alteridade.
Personen, die a priori keine Gemeinsamkeiten erkennen lassen, nicht die gleiche Muttersprache haben und sich auch sonst zumindest nicht über eine Sprache verständlich machen können, würden wohl kaum Zeit miteinander verbringen. Was geschieht jedoch, wenn Menschen durch gewisse Umstände dazu gezwungen werden? Drei Filme thematisieren eine durch Krisensituationen hervorgerufene interkulturelle Begegnung und entwickeln divergente Konfliktpotentiale und Lösungsansätze: der 1996 erschienene tschechische Film "Kolya", der 1999 veröffentlichte deutsche Film "Nachtgestalten" und der 2011 ausgestrahlte deutsche Film "Dreiviertelmond". Letzterer soll im Fokus stehen und die deutsch-türkische Verständigung verdeutlichen. Zum einen soll die Filmanalyse bestimmte Motive der interkulturellen Begegnung herausarbeiten und den Umgang mit Fremd und Eigen, Nähe und Distanz erörtern, des Weiteren soll versucht werden, die Filme aus aktueller Perspektive zu besprechen und Antworten darauf zu finden, wie eine Verständigung zwischen den Kulturen, zwischen den Generationen möglich ist. Auffällig ist außerdem, dass die Filme aktuelle Thematiken besprechen, die interessante Debatten anstoßen könnten. Es ließe sich zum Beispiel danach fragen, wie die Kluft zwischen den Generationen, die Unverständlichkeit der Interessen zwischen Jung und Alt, zwischen Menschen, die an ihrem Geburtsort leben und Personen, die aus anderen Ländern zuziehen, verhandelt werden. Ist eine Verständigung trotz festgefahrener Vorstellungen und Wertungen des 'Anderen' überhaupt möglich? Können angelernte und indoktrinierte Urteile und Bilder des 'Anderen' aufgebrochen werden?
During 1933 and 1939, the Swiss author, journalist and photographer Annemarie Schwarzenbach visited the so-called »Orient« four times. In the intellectual history of the West this part of the world was considered the topography of the »Other«. So the model of dichotomy between the two sexes, predominating the society of the 19th century, got an equivalent outside. A male and strong Europe was opposed to a female and weak East so that the »Orient« became the embodiment of challenging sexuality and devoted feminity. First Schwarzenbach regarded Turkey just as one station of the first and last journey on her way to Persia and Afghanistan, but in her texts it turns out to be a country, which is characterized by a male force („eine männliche Kraft“). Turkey’s female inhabitants get a specific role: They are the standard according to which women from other countries are described. For the European protagonists Turkey is the starting point of their search to a border („Schwelle“) to cross. This process also shifts the established borders of hegemonic discourses. Categories like »me« versus »the other« or »own« versus »strange« become deconstructed for the benefit of polyphonic concepts of identity, which in turn include breaks and contradictions. Thus the literary subject moves between finding and dissolving itself. The article demonstrates that Schwarzenbach´s texts about Turkey include writing techniques that evolve different processes regarding the identity of gender and culture.