Refine
Year of publication
- 2008 (2521) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (1000)
- Doctoral Thesis (315)
- Part of Periodical (273)
- Book (263)
- Working Paper (137)
- Part of a Book (134)
- Review (133)
- Report (91)
- Conference Proceeding (59)
- Preprint (27)
Language
- German (1592)
- English (768)
- French (47)
- Portuguese (43)
- Croatian (42)
- Italian (8)
- Multiple languages (8)
- Spanish (5)
- mis (4)
- dut (2)
Keywords
- Deutsch (48)
- Literatur (44)
- Rezension (43)
- Filmmusik (42)
- Germanistik (31)
- Russland (29)
- Linguistik (25)
- Übersetzung (23)
- Jelinek, Elfriede (20)
- Theater (18)
Institute
- Medizin (234)
- Extern (211)
- Präsidium (129)
- Biochemie und Chemie (87)
- Biowissenschaften (71)
- Physik (64)
- Erziehungswissenschaften (62)
- Gesellschaftswissenschaften (61)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (59)
- Geowissenschaften (52)
Wir haben das Feld der sozialen Situationen sondiert und die spektatorische Situation als eine spezifische Zeichensituation und Verkehrsform erörtert. Darüber hinaus sind problemgeschichtliche Aspekte der Figur des Zuschauers zur Sprache gekommen; gleichsam als Bestandteil konzeptioneller Vorarbeiten zur konkreten kultursemiotischen Untersuchung historischer Modelle von Spectatorship in ihrer funktionellen Typenvielfalt.
Editionen separieren Texte von den Kontexten, in denen sie bei ihrem Entstehungsprozess mit der Hand und technischen Schreibwerkzeugen unterschiedlichster Art geschrieben, als Erstdruck publiziert und von den Zeitgenossen ursprünglich rezipiert worden sind. Zugleich generieren sie, je nach ihren editorischen Prämissen, für die späteren Leser durch die von ihnen vollzogene Selektion, die Anordnung nach Textsorten oder die Anwendung anderer Strukturierungsregeln sowie durch die dabei vorgenommene Hierarchisierung, Kommentierung oder auch Nicht-Kommentierung ihrerseits neue Kontexte und konstruieren so ein bestimmtes, die Rezeption lenkendes Profil von Autor und Werk. Das ist, wie bei anderen prominenten Autoren, auch in der Wirkungsgeschichte Walter Benjamins der Fall. Ich möchte diesem Spannungsverhältnis von Dekontextualisierung und Rekontextualisierung im Folgenden am Beispiel der sogenannten 'kleineren' literaturkritischen Arbeiten - schon das Epitheton ist ein Beispiel für den erwähnten Selektions- und Hierarchisierungsprozess - nachgehen, also anhand der 'Kritiken und Rezensionen', die Benjamin seit der zweiten Hälfte der 1920er Jahre in der 'Frankfurter Zeitung', der 'Literarischen Welt' und an anderer Stelle veröffentlicht hat und deren Korpus im Wesentlichen in dem 1972 publizierten dritten Band der 'Gesammelten Schriften' publiziert worden ist. Ich werde mich dabei, in Blick auf den für diesen Beitrag zur Verfügung stehenden Raum, auf die Skizze zentraler Grundprobleme, auf pointierte Thesen und exemplarische Beispiele beschränken – in der Hoffnung, gerade durch solche Verknappung und Pointierung Impulse für eine weiterführende Diskussion der angesprochenen Probleme zu liefern. Einleitend werde ich zunächst einige grundsätzliche Fragen der Benjamin-Edition skizzieren. Im Anschluss daran werde ich die aktuelle Editionslage von Benjamins Arbeiten zur Literaturkritik im Hinblick auf die Leitfrage meines Beitrags, also auf das Spannungsverhältnis von Text(en) und Kontext(en), kritisch analysieren. Schließlich soll anhand einiger ausgewählter Rezensionen exemplarisch gezeigt werden, welche Bedeutung die in der bisherigen Editionspraxis meist ausgeblendeten Kontexte (z.B. Publikations-, Medien-, Wissenschaftskontexte, biografisch-soziale Kontexte, historische und politische Kontexte etc.) für ein Verständnis des Literaturkritikers Benjamin gewinnen können, sofern man ihnen editorisch die gebührende Beachtung schenkt. Dabei werden Umrisse eines neuen und anderen Benjamin-Bildes sichtbar, das sich von dem bisher verbreiteten nicht nur in Nuancen unterscheidet.
This article parts from an interdisciplinary point of view. Its main interest lies in the rich and complex interaction between the literary text and the image. These relations are understood as a “reciprocal illumination between the arts”, according to a publication of Oskar Walzel (Berlin, 1917). It will first investigate two historical landmarks in relation to literature and the image: first, the social differentiation around 1800 and its imposition of a purely textual literature and second, the avant-garde with its intense interaction between the various forms of artistic communication. The paper will then approach two contemporary examples of novels which combine visual and textual material.
' The United Nations-organised plebiscite on 11 February 1961 was one of the most significant events in the history of the southern and northern parts of the British-administered trust territory in Cameroon. John Percival was sent by the then Colonial Office as part of the team to oversee the process. This book captures the story of the plebiscite in all its dimensions and intricacies and celebrates the author's admiration for things African through a series of reminiscences of what life was like in the 1960s, both for the Africans themselves and for John Percival as a very young man. The complex story is also a series of reflections about the effect of the modern world on Africa. It is a thorough, insightful, rich and enlightening first-hand source on a political landmark that has never been told before in this way. In a vivid style with a great sense of humour, Percival's witty, cogent, eyewitness and active-participant account deconstructs the rumours and misrepresentations about the February 1961 Plebiscite which was a prelude to reunification and to the present day politics of 'belonging' in Cameroon. ''One of the major merits of this book is to provide us with a deeper insight into the role of those actors who have never been the subject of plebiscite studies, namely the Plebiscite Supervisory Officers.'' - Piet Konings, African Studies Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands John Percival-Anthropologist, Writer, Television Broadcaster of many innovative BBC series on the environment, history and anthropology. As a young graduate he was recruited and sent to serve in the Southern Cameroons as a Plesbiscite Supervisory Officer in 1961. He died in 2005 after a recent return visit to Cameroon with Nigel Wenban-Smith who writes an epilogue. This posthumous memoir has been edited by his wife, Lalage Neal.'
We perform a detailed study of the adjoint static potential in the pseudoparticle approach, which is a model for SU(2) Yang-Mills theory. We find agreement with the Casimir scaling hypothesis and there is clear evidence for string breaking. At the same time the potential in the fundamental representation is linear for large separations. Our results are in qualitative agreement with results from lattice computations.
Naturalness is one of the most important criteria in nature conservation. This paper examines the fundamental concepts underlying the definition and assessment of naturalness. Its role in nature conservation and forest management under conditions of global change is also discussed. The degree of naturalness may be defined in ordinal classes. The “static” concept of the potential natural vegetation (pnV), developed in the 1950ies, is mostly used as the reference state. In other cases, its reversed concept, the hemeroby (degree of articifiality) is assessed, based on the intensity and frequency of human impacts. Since the 1970ies, more attention has been given to natural dynamics than in earlier approaches, e.g. in forest succession models. At the end of the 1980ies, the previous importance was increasingly stressed of natural browsing by large herbivores and the role of predators. These large herbivors are extinct today in most cultural European landscapes. It is assumed, that they open up the canopy, and create park-like forest structures which contain a diversity of habitats for other types of organism (birds, insects). Changed and permanently changing environments and altering patterns of competition between species continue to modify natural processes today. Some of the more conspicuous effects are the extinction of native species and immigration of species to new regions. Long-lived ecosystems like forests are however not able to adapt quickly to such changes and may be unable to find a new balance with the environment. Today, such changes occur very rapidly, and are reducing the original naturalness of ecosystems. Because of this, the criterion “naturalness” must be downweighted. Conversely, more importance should be attached to other criteria: particularly originality (= original naturalness) and restorability. Forestry is contributing to this accelerated change of biocoenoses by increasing disturbances and introducing exotic tree species. Naturalisation of some exotic tree species modifies the natural processes and creates a “new allochthonous naturalness”. Because of this, forest planning should try to preserve or restore stands with attributes of the “original forest”. Exotic species should not be planted, or only in a very restricted way.
The Barn
(2008)
As a veteran playwright and actor, Kwo Victor Elame Musinga is more than just a pioneer in popular theatre. His simple but profound messages demonstrate a depth of understanding and insight into human nature and the nature of society. The texts he crafts are universal and timeless in their content and appeal, even as the themes and situations that inspire them are localized in specific places, experiences and histories. The Barn is a collection of three topical plays. Njema captures the predicament of love in a context where innocence and trust are preyed upon by deceit, dishonesty, promiscuity, waywardness, callous indifference to human life, the reckless abandon of parental authority and wisdom by youth in a hurry to celebrate sexuality, irresponsible manhood with or without the connivance of girls/women, and HIV/AIDS and its terror. Invitation to God addresses elitism and fair-weather friendship even among believers. In Moka, the theme of friendship is explored through the simple act of dishonesty and greed, especially to those with whom one should be nothing but virtuous, open, generous and kind. In these plays Kwo Victor Elame Musinga explores the virtues of being human, while addressing the dark side of humanity.
The bee fauna of the Greater Puerto Rico area was studied. A review of the previous relevant studies is presented. An annotated catalog and information about the origin and distributional patterns are also provided. Thirty-nine species of bees occur in Puerto Rico and adjacent islands. This fauna is composed of four elements: exclusive Puerto Rican endemics (26.5%); Antillean endemics occurring on multiple islands (76.5%); continental species that have also colonized the Antilles (23.5%); and species introduced through human activity (12.8%). The bee fauna was both low in its diversity and showed the highest level of disharmony in relation to other faunas of the Greater Antilles. A lectotype is here designated for Agapostemon krugii Wolcott, 1936.
Cellular metabolism can be envisaged by fluorescence lifetime imaging of fluorophores sensitive to specific intracellular factors such as [H+], [Ca2+], [O2], membrane potential, temperature, polarity of the probe environment, and alterations in the conformation and interactions of macromolecules. Lifetime measurements of the probes allow the quantitative determination of the intracellular factors. Fluorescence microscopy taking advantage of time-correlated single photon counting is a novel method that outperforms all other techniques with its single photon sensitivity and picoseconds time resolution. In this work, a time- and space-correlated single photon counting system was established to investigate the behavior of 2-(4-(dimethylamino)styryl)-1-methylpyridinium iodide (DASPMI) in living cells. DASPMI is known to selectively stain mitochondria in living cells. The uptake and fluorescence intensity of DASPMI in mitochondria is a dynamic measure of membrane potential. Hence, an endeavour was made to elucidate the mechanism of DASPMI fluorescence by obtaining spectrally-resolved fluorescence decays in different solvents. A bi-exponential decay model was sufficient to globally describe the wavelength dependent fluorescence in ethanol and chloroform. While in glycerol, a three-exponential decay model was necessary for global analysis. In the polar low-viscous solvent water, a mono-exponential decay model fitted the decay data. The sensitivity of DASPMI fluorescence to solvent viscosity was analysed using various proportions of glycerol/ethanol mixtures. The lifetimes were found to increase with increasing solvent viscosity. The negative amplitudes of the short lifetime component found in chloroform and glycerol at the longer wavelengths validated the formation of new excited state species from the initially excited state. Time-resolved emission spectra in chloroform and glycerol showed a biphasic increase of spectral width and emission maxima. The spectral width had an initial fast increase within 150 ps and a near constant thereafter. A two-state model based on solvation of the initially excited state and further formation of TICT state has been proposed to explain the excited state kinetics and has been substantiated by the de-composition of time-resolved spectra. The knowledge of DASPMI photophysics in a variety of solvents now provides the means of deducing complex physiological parameters of mitochondria from its behavior in living cells. Spatially-resolved fluorescence decays from single mitochondria or only very few organelles of XTH2 cells signified distinctive three-exponential decay kinetics of viscous environment. Based on DASPMI photophysics in a variety of solvents, these lifetimes have been attributed to the fluorescence from locally excited state (LE), intramolecular charge transfer state (ICT) and twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) state. A considerable variation in lifetime among mitochondria of different morphology and within single cell was evident corresponding to the high physiological variations within single cells. Considerable shortening of the short lifetime component (τ1) under high membrane potential condition, such as in the presence of ATP and/or substrate, was similar to quenching and dramatic decrease of lifetime in polar solvents. Under these conditions τ2 and τ3 increased with decreasing contribution. Upon treatment with ionophore nigericin, hyperpolarization of mitochondria resulted in remarkable shortening of τ1 from 159 ps to 38 ps. Inhibiting respiration by cyanide resulted in notable increase of mean lifetime and decrease of mitochondrial fluorescence. Increase of DASPMI fluorescence on conditions elevating mitochondrial membrane potential has been attributed to uptake according Nernst distributions, to de-localisation of π electrons, quenching processes of the methyl pyridinium moiety and restricted torsional dynamics at the mitochondrial inner membrane. Accordingly, determination of anisotropy in DASPMI stained mitochondria in living XTH2 cells, revealed dependence of anisotropy on membrane potential. Such changes in anisotropy attributed to restriction of the torsional dynamics about the flexible single bonds neighboring the olefinic double bond revealed the previously known sub-mitochondrial zones with higher membrane potential along its length. Membrane-potential-dependent changes in anisotropy have further been demonstrated in senescent chick embryo fibroblasts. In conclusion, spectroscopic observations of excited-state kinetics of DASPMI in solvents and its behavior in living cells had revealed for the first time its localisation, mechanism of voltage sensitive fluorescence and its membrane-potential-dependent anisotropy in living cells. The simultaneous dependence of DASPMI photophysics on mitochondrial inner membrane viscosity and transmembrane potential has been highlighted.