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[Nachruf] Manfred Faßler
(2021)
Die Dissertation widmet sich einem Aspekt der hellenistischen Lebenswelt: dem Stellenwert des Athleten und des Intellektuellen innerhalb der für männliche Polisbürger geltenden Wertprädikationen. Hintergrund der Fragestellung bildet ein für die hellenistische Zeit postuliertes abnehmendes Ansehen der körperlichen gegenüber der geistigen (Aus)bildung – eine Annahme, die sich unter anderem auch auf ein Zurückgehen von Athletenbildern in der griechischen Sepulkralkunst stützt und in der Dissertation kritisch hinterfragt wird. Dazu liegt mit dieser Arbeit eine ausführliche, lokal und chronologisch eingegrenzte Studie zur Ikonographie hellenistischer Grabstelen männlicher Verstorbener aus einem Zeitraum vom 3. Jh. v. Chr. bis in das fortgeschrittene 1. Jh. v. Chr. vor. Die Materialbasis bilden die Stelen aus Delos, Smyrna, Ephesos, Samos, Kyzikos und Rhodos.
Zur Klärung, wie sich die Darstellung von Athleten und Intellektuellen in den betrachteten Regionen quantitativ niederschlägt, wurden das Bildthema sowie die Bildzeichen auf den Grabreliefs analysiert. Hierbei sind mit Bildzeichen vorhandene Attribute, aber auch weitere Hinweise, wie bestimmte Körperhaltungen, gemeint. Unterschieden wird bei den Bildzeichen außerdem zwischen primären und sekundären Bildzeichen, wobei primäre dingliche Zeichen – wie Schriftrolle oder Strigilis – eine meist sichere Zuschreibung zur athletischen bzw. intellektuellen Sphäre gewährleisten, wohingegen etwa die in der Arbeit zu den sekundären Zeichen gezählte Bekleidung oder Haltung ohne weiter verifizierende Bildinhalte zumeist deutungsoffener sind.
Über eine ausführliche quantitative Auszählung der einzelnen Bildzeichen in Verbindung mit den vorkommenden Darstellungsschemata gelangen Rückschlüsse auf die männlichen Repräsentationspraktiken in den betrachteten Regionen. So zeigte sich beispielsweise, dass die Stelen auf Delos im Allgemeinen zwar eher attributarm sind, die Wahl für sportthematische Bildzeichen jedoch vergleichsweise häufig getroffen wurde. Der Vergleich mit Grabmälern aus den übrigen untersuchten Poleis schärfte die Aussagekraft der ikonographischen Analysen, da Unterschiede sowie Gemeinsamkeiten der jeweiligen lokalen Bildsprache, ihrer Kompositionsvorlieben und Bildtraditionen herausgearbeitet werden konnten. Solche stadttypischen Ausprägungen zeigen deutlich, dass die hellenistische Kunst bzw. Kultur nicht als strenge Einheit zu begreifen ist.
Abschließend ist festzuhalten, dass die Athletenpräsentation konstant im männlichen Wertespektrum verankert und etabliert geblieben ist. Folglich ist die Annahme, sportliche Repräsentation habe im Hellenismus zugunsten einer geistigen abgenommen, in dieser Deutlichkeit nicht haltbar. Vielmehr gelten geänderte Bild- und Darstellungsformen, die im Vergleich zur vorhellenistischen Praxis bisweilen recht subtil erscheinen, aber vor allem eine kombinierte Vorführung verschiedener Qualitäten, darunter sowohl geistige wie sportliche inbegriffen, anstrebten.
Die Normativität des Korans
(2021)
Der Koran hat eine besondere Bedeutung für Menschen muslimischen Glaubens. Er gilt als göttliche Offenbarung, die mit dem Propheten Muhammad als Medium der Menschheit übermittelt wurde. Dem hohen rituellen, ästhetischen und religiös-emotionalen Wert des Korans als Wort Gottes steht allerdings ein weniger stark verbreitetes grundlegendes theologisches Wissen zu seiner Erschließung gegenüber. Die Entstehungsgeschichte und der Offenbarungskontext sind beim Verständnis und der Auslegung des Texts von essentieller Bedeutung. Vor allem aber die wissenschaftlichen Diskurse in den Jahrhunderten seit der Offenbarung des Korans, aus denen das unendliche Spektrum an Auslegungen und deren Wandel über die Jahrhunderte hervorgeht, sind wenig bis gar nicht bekannt...
Die Normativität des Korans
(2021)
Der Koran hat eine besondere Bedeutung für Menschen muslimischen Glaubens. Er gilt als göttliche Offenbarung, die mit dem Propheten Muhammad als Medium der Menschheit übermittelt wurde. Dem hohen rituellen, ästhetischen und religiös-emotionalen Wert des Korans als Wort Gottes steht allerdings ein weniger stark verbreitetes grundlegendes theologisches Wissen zu seiner Erschließung gegenüber. Die Entstehungsgeschichte und der Offenbarungskontext sind beim Verständnis und der Auslegung des Texts von essentieller Bedeutung. Vor allem aber die wissenschaftlichen Diskurse in den Jahrhunderten seit der Offenbarung des Korans, aus denen das unendliche Spektrum an Auslegungen und deren Wandel über die Jahrhunderte hervorgeht, sind wenig bis gar nicht bekannt...
Quo vadis Papua: case study of special autonomy policies and socio-political movements in Papua
(2021)
This research discusses socio-political movements in Papua as a result of the implementation of special autonomy policies (Otsus) by the government for almost two decades. Theoretically, indigenous Papuans should support it but in empirical reality, Otsus has been considered "fail" by the indigenous Papuan people because there are still many problems that have not been resolved by Otsus. This negative response indicates public dissatisfaction towards the development planning process in Papua. This dissertation aims to examine these issues; why these policies and development plans failed and are protested, why protests against them are prolonged, how do protests develop into social movements, and whether indigenous Papuan movements can be classified as social movements. The study uses qualitative approach, through case study methods. Data are collected through interviews, observations and documentation studies. The research finds that the presence of Otsus in Papua in addition to being a source of new conflict, also triggers conflicts in the form of protests and resistance movements against the government of Indonesia, both physical and political. This research discovers that, indeed the Otsus management has succeeded in changing the face of Papua because of the many physical projects but the development of human aspects and supporting instruments has not been touched at all. Thus, only a small percentage of indigenous Papuans feel the benefits of Otsus, while most of them are still struggling. This paper finds that protests against Otus are due to the growing resentments from the community so long as their demands are not met. This study suggests that the presence of the state in Papua through the Otsus policy must be re-evaluated. The state must ensure that in the Otsus era, the indigenous Papuans should not be marginalized, so that aspirations for the welfare of all indigenous Papuans through Otsus can be realized.
This article explores the liturgical functions of cross-shaped staurothekes, reliquaries of the True Cross, in twelfth-century Sicily. These luxurious objects were once at the centre of the devotion of the growing Christian communities on an island undergoing dramatic social changes. This contribution examines the figuration of these crosses and the messages they conveyed to their audiences, focusing on documented processions as displays of public piety. To this end, the contents of two liturgical manuscripts from Palermo, evidence in contemporary pictorial arts and coinage, and the urban layout of the Norman capital will shed light on the reception of the symbol of the cross in the cosmopolitan, yet increasingly intolerant Sicilian kingdom.
The merchant language of the Georgian Jews deserves scholarly attention for several reasons. The political and social developments of the last fifty years have caused the extinction of this very interesting form of communication, as most Georgian Jews have emigrated to Israel. In a natural interaction, the type of language described in this article can be found very rarely, if at all. Records of this communication have been preserved in various contexts and received different levels of scholarly attention. Our interest concerns the linguistic aspects as well as the classification.
In the following paper we argue that the specific merchant language of Georgian Jews belongs to the pragmatic phenomenon of “very indirect language.” The use of mostly Hebrew lexemes in Georgian conversation leads to an unfounded assumption that the speakers are equally competent in Hebrew and Georgian. It is reported that a high level of linguistic competence in Hebrew does not guarantee understanding of the Jewish merchant language. In the Georgian context, the decisive factors are membership in the professional interest group of merchants and residential membership in the Jewish community. These factors seem to be equivalent, because Jewish members of other professional groups (and those from outside the particular urban residential area) have difficulties in following the language that are similar to those of the Georgian majority. We describe the pragmatic structure of interactions conducted with the help of the merchant language and take into account the purpose of the language’s use or the intention of the speakers. Relevant linguistic examples are analysed and their sociocultural contexts explained.
As 2021 draws to a close, Covid-19 continues to prevail worldwide. With the proverbial return to normalcy still appearing distant, there is now a tacit acceptance globally that at least for the foreseeable future, we must live with Covid-19. Given that Covid-19 is an infectious disease—which by definition is transmitted from person to person—the continued prevalence of Covid-19 has implications for how local authorities, communities, and individuals around the world will approach public spaces. While it may be premature to assume a so-called coronacene (see Higgins et al. 2020), going into the future our use of public spaces will be overshadowed by the possibility, even if remote, of illness or death by virtue of close proximity to other individuals.
Along with parks and squares, streets and avenues, bazaars constitute ubiquitous public spaces, including in countries of the developing world, such as Armenia and Georgia, our countries of discussion here. Although there is not a clear bifurcation between bazaars and other types of marketplaces, bazaars will usually be comprised of a multitude of nonfranchised, self-owned, small businesses that are variously family-run or rely on family labor. They are usually perceived as chaotic places that lack hygiene (the purportedly unhygienic character of the bazaar was brought to the forefront with the pandemic, given how Covid-19’s origin is widely assumed to be a Wuhan wet market).
In Armenia and Georgia, and indeed, across the former Soviet Union, bazaars are a source of employment for the urban and peri-urban population; they also offer goods at price points attractive to a wide demographic. This working paper builds on the premise that the bazaar is an informal institution. Bazaar traders will typically assemble networks by themselves (with manufacturers and wholesalers, buyers and transporters). These networks will usually vary from one business to another. Also, ownership and rent structures are frequently opaque, and the majority of commercial transactions are in cash, which does not appear in state records. As a consequence, for the state, many small businesses do not exist (Fehlings and Karrar 2016, 2020).
For those of us researching bazaar trading, Covid-19 has given rise to a basic question: How have independent businesses been transformed by the pandemic? This working paper is an attempt to parse this question in light of developments in Armenia and Georgia. In this working paper, we suggest that the Covid-19 pandemic has deepened informality in the bazaar. That being said, we want to underscore that the present discussion is exploratory. Our ethnography remains limited, and we look forward to returning to the field as soon as it is safe to do so.
Der US-amerikanische Architekturdiskurs der 1990er Jahre ist entscheidend von den Theorien Gilles Deleuzes geprägt. Die Aneignung seiner philosophischen Konzepte und jener, die er gemeinsam mit Félix Guattari entwickelt hat, findet vor allem innerhalb des architekturtheoretischen Netzwerks der »Anyone Corporation« statt: In ihren Diskursen wimmelt es von glatten Räumen, organlosen Körpern, Rhizomen, Falten, abstrakten Maschinen und Diagrammen. Frederike Lausch zeigt auf, wie sich die »Anyone Corporation« durch die Bezugnahme auf Deleuze als intellektuelle Elite der Architekturdisziplin inszeniert und wie im Zuge der Entpolitisierung seiner Theorien die »Post-Criticality«-Bewegungen entstehen.
Filz zählt neben Fett zu den prägendsten Materialien im Œuvre von Joseph Beuys. Er nutzt es bereits im Frühwerk der 1950er-Jahre und setzt es im Laufe von vier Jahrzehnten künstlerischer Tätigkeit gattungsübergreifend in Collagen, Assemblagen, Skulpturen, Environments und in den Aktionen ein. In den frühen bildhaften Arbeiten in der Fläche verbleibend, nimmt das Textil von hier aus in skulpturalen, installativen und performativen Werken zunehmend räumliche Ausmaße an; mit dieser vielseitigen Verwendung verbunden ist ein selbstreflexiver Impetus, der sich kritisch sowohl gegen die Einheit der Form und damit auch des Kunstwerks als auch gegen die strikte Trennung künstlerischer Gattungen wendet. Das Ausgreifen der Filzarbeiten in den Raum und der damit verknüpfte selbstkritische Ansatz wird in vorliegender Dissertation mit dem Konzept der Selbstkritik der Kunst verknüpft, das von Theodor W. Adorno in seiner 1970 posthum erschienenen „Ästhetischen Theorie“ entwickelt wurde. Das Brüchigwerden der Form, für Adorno Ausgangspunkt werkimmanenter Kritik des Kunstwerks an sich selbst, lässt sich in der jeweiligen Komposition der Filzarbeiten beobachten, wie anhand von Werkanalysen zentraler Filzarbeiten gezeigt wird.
Based on Ivan Marcus’s concept of “open book” and considerations on medieval Ashkenazic concepts of authorship, the present article inquires into the circumstances surrounding the production of Sefer Arugat ha-Bosem, a collection of piyyut commentaries written or compiled by the thirteenth-century scholar Abraham b. Azriel. Unlike all other piyyut commentators, Abraham ben Azriel inscribed his name into his commentary and claims to supersede previous commentaries, asserting authorship and authority. Based on the two different versions preserved in MS Vatican 301 and MS Merzbacher 95 (Frankfurt fol. 16), already in 1939 Ephraim E. Urbach suggested that Abraham b. Azriel might have written more than one edition of his piyyut commentaries. The present reevaluation considers recent scholarship on concepts of authorship and “open genre” as well as new research into piyyut commentary. To facilitate a comparison with Marcus’s definition of “open book,” this article also explores the arrangement and rearrangement of small blocks of texts within a work.
This study explores literary representations of gender and sexuality in contemporary Malaysian Popular Fiction in English (MPFE) written by Malay Muslim authors that are published in between the years 2010 to 2020. It questions why gender and sexuality are considered sensitive topics and the public discussion of these topics is deemed taboo by some Malay Muslim traditionalists and contemporary scholars of Malay literature. Previous studies suggests that Islamic rules and regulations influence the Malaysian Malays worldview. Its sacred book, the Quran, has established clear-cut prohibitions against any sexual indulgence among its believers. Muslim writers must learn to restrict themselves from indulging in sexual writings in order to prevent them from intentionally or unintentionally arousing their readers’ sexual fantasies that may lead both parties to sinning. However, at the end of the twentieth century, many factors such as the impact of modernisation through scientific and industrial revolution on Malaysian society, the influence of Western Humanities theories among local intellects, and the introduction of Internet culture have contributed tremendously to the dramatic social changes in Malaysia. These changes are reflected heavily in its literary culture. In recent years, the Malay people’s awareness of their body and individuality is heightened. There is a surge of curiosity among contemporary Malay Muslims about their gender and sexuality and they would want a discussion. Following this development, the first objective of this study is to provide the latest discussion on gender and sexuality in MPFE by Malay Muslim authors. The second objective is to provide observations on how MPFE authors employ their literary strategies to approach aspects of gender and sexuality in their literary works. It pays attention to how writers express their acceptance, negotiations, and/or rejections towards the dominant “normative” or “common” values in the Malay society with regards to their body and sexuality. Using textual analysis to examine one novel and six short stories from the MPFE genre, this paper cross-examines Malay literary theories on sexual and erotic literature available in Pengkaedahan Melayu (Malay Methodology), Persuratan Baru (Genuine Literature), as well as Western theoretical approaches in Postcolonialism, Postmodernism and Feminism on gendering system and sexuality, in its aim to explain the growing interest in the topics in spite of the red-tape around sexual taboos in Malaysian literature.
"Imara – Moscheen und Umweltschutz" : Moscheegemeinden als Akteurinnen nachhaltiger Entwicklung
(2021)
Significant changes in the material culture, subsistence and mode of life are associated with the Middle (c. 2000–1600 BCE) and Late Bronze Ages (c. 1600–1300 BCE) in Eastern Arabia. Since first excavations in the 1970s, research has focused on the United Arab Emirates, where all major sites of this period known to date are situated. This birthed the idea of two different lines of development in the second millennium BC. While a more gradual change is assumed for the United Arab Emirates, Central Oman was regarded as having completely abandoned settled agricultural life, returning to a less complex social organisation. This article presents new evidence from Tawi Said, Al-Mudhairib and the Wilayat al-Mudhaybi that shows that the developments in both regions were more akin to each other than previously assumed. This encourages us to reconsider our assumptions about Central Oman’s social complexity during this pivotal period of Oman’s history.
This article examines the content and structure of the manuscripts of Sefer Ḥasidim, engaging with ideas concerning its production addressed in Ivan Marcus’s recently published book on Sefer Ḥasidim. Marcus has argued that the book was written piece by piece and not as an integral book and further suggested that each and every manuscript of Sefer Ḥasidim should be taken as a distinct edition of the book prepared by Judah he-Ḥasid. The present study demonstrates that, notwithstanding the gradual process in which Sefer Ḥasidim was written and the great variations among the manuscripts, it is possible to reconstruct a textual process that led to the larger compilations found in the three well-known text editions of Sefer Ḥasidim, represented by MS Parma 3280, MS JTS Boesky 45, and the edition printed in Bologna in 1538. The analysis focuses on the distribution of the text in the manuscripts. While it is difficult to show linear relations among them, the different versions demonstrate a gradual process of growth and enlargement of the material around topical structures. Since most of the material is transmitted in more than one exemplar and few passages appear in one manuscript alone, it is argued that the manuscripts can be linked to show how the material grew from random collections of single paragraphs to topically ordered clusters and into the larger compilations of Sefer Ḥasidim.
Honey and other bee products were likely a sought-after foodstuff for much of human history, with direct chemical evidence for beeswax identified in prehistoric ceramic vessels from Europe, the Near East and Mediterranean North Africa, from the 7th millennium BC. Historical and ethnographic literature from across Africa suggests bee products, honey and larvae, had considerable importance both as a food source and in the making of honey-based drinks. Here, to investigate this, we carry out lipid residue analysis of 458 prehistoric pottery vessels from the Nok culture, Nigeria, West Africa, an area where early farmers and foragers co-existed. We report complex lipid distributions, comprising n-alkanes, n-alkanoic acids and fatty acyl wax esters, which provide direct chemical evidence of bee product exploitation and processing, likely including honey-collecting, in over one third of lipid-yielding Nok ceramic vessels. These findings highlight the probable importance of honey collecting in an early farming context, around 3500 years ago, in West Africa.
This paper was presented at the workshop “Goods, Languages, and Cultures along the Silk Road” at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, October 18 and 19, 2019. While many contributions to the workshop focused on recent developments in China’s current “New Silk Road” politics, on forms of communication, and on contemporary exchange of goods and ideas across so-called Silk Road countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia and with China, this short essay focuses on the history of the so-called Silk Road as an important transport connection. Although what is now called the “Silk Road” was not a pure East-West binary in antiquity but rather developed into a network that also led to the South and North, the focus here will be on describing the East-West connection.
I will start with a few brief remarks on the origins of the connection referred to as the Silk Road and will then introduce the different great empires that shaped this connection between antiquity and the Middle Ages through military campaigns and by using it as a trading route and network. But the Silk Road was by no means only of economic and military importance. Its significance for the exchange and dissemination of religions should also be mentioned. This paper does not detail the importance of the numerous individual religions in the area of the Silk Road but discusses the phenomenon of the spread of religions and the loss of some of their own distinguishing characteristics in this spread, a phenomenon that could be described as a “unity of opposites” (coincidentia oppositorum). Finally, the essay asks who, in the face of the regular replacement of powers, held sovereignty over the transport connection: the subject (in the form of the empires) or the object (in the form of the road).
Who were the main protagonists of and along the Silk Road in the course of history? Who were the people who became the great powers of the ancient Silk Road, building up the material route, governing parts of it, and organizing trade and relationships from the far East to the extreme West of the Eurasian continent?
This article provides a comparative overview of phonological and phonetic differences of Mukrī Kurdish varieties and their geographical distribution. Based on the examined data, four distinct varieties can be distinguished. In each variety area, different phonological patterns are analyzed according to age, gender, and social groups in order to establish cross-regional and cross-generational developments in relation to specific phonological distributions and shifts. The variety regions which are examined in the present article include West Mukrī (representing an archaic form of Mukrī), Central Mukrī (representing a linguistically peripheral dialect), East Mukrī (representing mixed archaic and peripheral dialect features), and South Mukrī (sharing features of both Mukrī and Ardałānī). The study concludes that variation in the Mukrīyān region depends on phonological developments, which in turn are due to geographical and sociological factors. Moreover, contact-induced change and internal language development are also established as triggering factors distinguishing regional variants.