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The interest of this work devotes itself to the repeating linguistic actions of the students in the DaF conversation lessons. Repetitions in the lesson discourse are functionally different than repetitions in the daily discourse. The support of repetitions by the students in the class discourse is tried to be demonstrated here on the basis of examples. Recordings from the DaF conversation lessons were transcribed and reconstructed according to Hiat. The kinds of the repetitions and their functions in these DaF conversation lessons are limited with this study. The findings of the study should be concerned consciously in order to accomplish a better understanding and reacting to these repeating actions of the students like inquiry, correction, confirmation, precautionary self-control, verification and confirmation in the conversation lessons –most of which are accomplished by the students for a certain aim however unconsciously.
Jan Niklas Howe untersucht Freuds Modell des Unheimlichen im Hinblick auf ästhetische und reale Emotionen und bezieht sich dabei auf neuere psychologische Forschungen von 'mere exposure', 'prototypicality' und 'cognitive fluency'. Das Gefühl des Unheimlichen lässt sich Howe zufolge auf Wiederholungsprozesse zurückführen und als Rekontextualisierung ästhetischer Lust beschreiben, die notwendig zu höchst realer ästhetischer Unlust führt.
Aumiller writes lists to externalize what overwhelms her. To be in control. To master and move on. Yet, her lists circle back to her. The process of writing the same list every day or the same act of writing the list is a looping. She returns to herself, to the parts she can remember and to the parts she can't remember, but also can't leave behind.
The essay engages with a screenplay by Michel Foucault, written in 1970 for a film, not realized during Foucault's lifetime, about Pablo Picasso's "Las Meninas", a series of 58 paintings that the artist made in 1957, taking up, updating, reinterpreting the famous painting with the same title by Diego Velázquez (1656). This screenplay is at the same time an example of critical reflection on reenactment in art history and itself a reenactment practice of sorts: the filmic repetition of an artistic repetition. It invites a reflection on the role of repetition as a critical operation: how doubles, reenacted images, and 'countermimesis' can become creative gestures and opening movements of transformation through plays of refraction, duplication, and multiplication of the realities and subjectivities at stake in them.
Laut Richard Dyer haben die Menschen schon immer Serialität als Spiel mit Wiederholung und Erwartung geliebt: "It’s clear that humans have always loved seriality. Bards, jongleurs, griots and yarnspinners (not to mention parents and nurses) have all long known the value of leaving their listeners wanting more, of playing on the mix of repetition and anticipation, and indeed of the anticipation of repetition, that underpins serial pleasure. However, it is only under capitalism that seriality became a reigning principle of cultural production, starting with the serialisation of novels and cartoons, then spreading to news and movie programming." Dyer unterscheidet in seinem historischen Abriss kaum zwischen Wiederholung und Serialität. Die Menschen lieben Serialität, weil es eine Lust an der Wiederholung gibt, doch erst seit der seriellen Produktion des Kapitalismus hat sich die Serie als Format durchgesetzt. Die Wiederholung im Kinderspiel unterscheidet sich jedoch von den Fortsetzungsromanen und Fernsehserien, da hier Variation und Linearität partiell eine größere Rolle spielt, die sich nicht auf die Erwartungshaltung in der rituellen Wiederholung reduzieren lässt. Denn obwohl dem zuzustimmen ist, dass "allen serialen und seriell angebotenen Produkten [...] das stilistische Merkmal der Wiederholung gemeinsam [ist]", ist es meiner Ansicht nach notwendig, zwischen der Wiederholung und dem Seriellen in kulturellen und ästhetischen Ausdrucksformen zu unterscheiden. Daher werde ich zunächst die Wiederholung genauer skizzieren, bevor ich auf spezifische serielle Formate in Film und Fernsehen eingehe.
Wie wenige literarische Werke stehen die Romane von Bret Easton Ellis im Zeichen von Serie und Wiederholung. Sie bersten vor Motiv- und Form-Wiederholungen, sind mit ihren intertextuellen Zitaten einerseits Fortsetzungen voneinander, andererseits "Wiederholungen" von Figuren aus den Texten anderer Autoren und Produzenten, sie sind besessen von der Serialität der elektronischen Medien, und - last but not least - sie warten mit einem Serienmörder (in 'American Psycho') und mit Anschlagsserien (in 'Glamorama') auf. Damit überschreiten sie die analytische Unterscheidung der Bereiche des Seriellen, die Christine Blättler in ihrem enzyklopädischen Aufsatz über die Serie aufgestellt hat: Produktion, Präsentation und Narration sind bei Ellis gleichzeitig von Wiederholungen und Serien gekennzeichnet.
Repetition
(2019)
This article explores the creative value of the notion of 'repetition' in Michel Foucault's texts from the 1960s and early 1970s. Re-enacting Gilles Deleuze's philosophy, Foucault implicitly refers to the Freudian repetition mechanisms in order to distort and reverse them. Foucault's repetition is de-psychologized, affectively de-individualizing, and temporally erratic, using the power of a senseless repetition to create new possibilities for the future.
Repetition
(2019)
Locating authenticity in artworks that are remade (all or in part) or re-performed over time presents a unique challenge for art conservators, whose activities have traditionally been oriented toward caring for the material aspects of art objects. The paper offers a brief overview of perspectives on authenticity and discusses various theoretical models that have been developed to conceptualize how media, installation, and performance artworks are displayed and cared for over time. These include the score/performance model, the concepts of autographicity and allographicity, the concept of iteration, and authenticity as a practice. The author proposes a theoretical model based on the ritual aspects of presenting artworks, arguing that authenticity, repetition, and community participation can be reconciled within a ritual context.
Can reenactment both as reactivation of images and restaging of exhibitions be considered an alternative way of tackling the critical task to re-present art history (i.e., to present it anew) in the here and now, over and over and over again? The gesture of restoring visibility to something no longer present, reactivating or reembodying it as an object/image in and for the present, is here proposed as a (political) act of restitution and historical recontextualization. Examining the boundaries between past and present, original and copy (as well as originality and copyright), repetition and variation, authenticity and auraticity, presence and absence, canon and appropriation, durée and transience, the paper focuses on remediation, reinterpretation, and reconstruction as creative gestures and cultural promises in contemporary art practice, curatorship, and museology.