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This monograph contributes to research in content and language integrated learning (CLIL). Amidst the absence of any educational standards as well as other research deficits, Chapter II sketches a conceptual framework with a competence model for multilingual CLIL classes in the social sciences. It develops a line of argument for the promotion of global discourse competence for democratic participation within a transnational civil society. The subsequent four chapters, comprising one conceptual, one methodological and two empirical contributions, look at different aspects of the conceptual framework. Chapter III defends the developed competence model and further specifies its idea of thought in proposing the construction of multilingual 'cosmopolitan classroom glocalities' for the genesis of 21st century skills. The example of #climonomics, a multilingual EU parliamentary debate about climate change, illustrates its practical realization within school education and exemplifies the contribution to education for sustainable development (ESD) and the value of democratic and participatory learning arrangements. Chapter IV introduces design-based action research (DBAR), the method used in Chapters V & VI. DBAR is a hybrid of action and design-based research and is thereby ideally suited for bridging the gap of theory and practice in educational research. Chapter IV argues for closer cooperation between academics and practitioners, along with pragmatic stakeholder participation by involving students and teachers into research, in a quest for inductively making practical knowledge scientific. Chapter V, more language-biased, draws on the notion of translanguaging and presents the concept of 'trans-foreign-languaging' as a multilingual approach to CLIL with first language (L1) use. During six weeks DBAR, a comprehensive CLIL teaching model with judicious and principled L1 use was designed together with the study group. The model offers affordance-based and differentiated methods for different learner types. Its genesis is reconstructed by a thick description of the natural classroom dynamics. Chapter VI, rather subjectbased, asks about the influence of such bilingual language use on emotions, in particular on the formation of political judgments. It suggests different ways to measure emotions during various natural classroom settings. The chapter concludes that CLIL with L1 use has the potential to engender a perfect equilibrium of emotional and rational learning, integrating emotions into learning and valuing its positive contribution towards appropriate and multilayered political judgments. The concluding Chapter VII binds the previous chapters together and discusses the results. Criteria for the generalization of the results are assessed, and limits demarcated. It highlights the contribution to CLIL research and looks into the future, suggesting further direct classroom interventions, also with the goal to prepare the research field for larger undertakings.
Most studies on bilingual children's metalinguistic awareness assess metalinguistic awareness using monolingual tasks. This may not reflect how a bilingual's languages dynamically interact with each other in creating metalinguistic representations. We tested 33 Greek–Italian bilingual children (8–11 years) for metalinguistic awareness using acceptability-rating tasks in which they had to judge and explain grammatical errors. The tasks were in monolingual and bilingual modes in order to show how far metalinguistic awareness in Italian benefited from the activation of Greek. The participants exhibited better metalinguistic awareness abilities in Italian in the bilingual acceptability-rating task in which Greek was activated. The benefits of the bilingual mode were visible in the judgment and explanation of errors and were modulated by syntactic processing abilities in Italian, length of exposure to Italian, type of structure, and age. The results show that metalinguistic awareness can be shared across languages. We discuss the pedagogical implications of our findings.
Das Buch im Buch als Archiv
(2022)
Die Masterarbeit von Svenja Blumenrath mit dem Titel "Das Buch im Buch als Archiv" ist eine interdisziplinäre Zusammenführung von Literaturwissenschaft und Archivstudien. Anhand von sieben ausgewählten kinder- und jugendliterarischen Werken analysiert die Autorin die Funktion des Buches im Buch als Archiv für die erzählte Welt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass das Buch im Buch nicht nur als narrative Struktur dient, sondern auch als Archiv fungiert, das Erinnerungen und Wissen bewahren, aber auch verwehren kann. Diese Erkenntnisse bieten neue Einblicke in die Verbindung von Literatur und Archivwesen.
In this paper, we investigate the question of whether and how perspective taking at the linguistic level interacts with perspective taking at the level of co-speech gestures. In an experimental rating study, we compared test items clearly expressing the perspective of an individual participating in the event described by the sentence with test items which clearly express the speaker’s or narrator’s perspective. Each test item was videotaped in two different versions: In one version, the speaker performed a co-speech gesture in which she enacted the event described by the sentence from a participant’s point of view (i.e. with a character viewpoint gesture). In the other version, she performed a co-speech gesture depicting the event described by the sentence as if it was observed from a distance (i.e. with an observer viewpoint gesture). Both versions of each test item were shown to participants who then had to decide which of the two versions they find more natural. Based on the experimental results we argue that there is no general need for perspective taking on the linguistic level to be aligned with perspective taking on the gestural level. Rather, there is clear preference for the more informative gesture.
Der Kultur- und Literaturwissenschaftler Ladislaus Ludescher hat in einer Langzeitstudie untersucht, wie der Globale Süden in den Nachrichten behandelt wird. Sein Fazit ist niederschmetternd: In der Tagesschau, aber auch in ausgewählten Printmedien spielten Themen der südlichen Erdhalbkugel kaum oder gar keine Rolle. Die Corona-Pandemie habe diese mediale Einseitigkeit sogar noch verstärkt.
Wie reagiert das Filmpublikum auf die anhaltende Infektionsgefahr? Lassen sich die Menschen mithilfe von Fantasy- und Romantik-Streifen in eine andere Welt entführen, um der Realität zumindest für kurze Zeit zu entkommen? Die Filmwissenschaftlerin Isadora Campregher Paiva hat überraschende Beobachtungen gemacht.
Editorial [2021, deutsch]
(2021)
Editorial [2021, english]
(2021)
Im Oktober 1985 besetzten Mitglieder der Jüdischen Gemeinde Frankfurt die Bühne der Kammerspiele, um die Premiere der Uraufführung von Rainer Werner Fassbinders Stück »Der Müll, die Stadt und der Tod« zu verhindern. Auf dem Symposium »[Bühnen] Besetzungen«, das vom 23. bis 25. April 2021 stattfand, nahmen Zeitzeug*innen, Wissenschaftler*innen und Künstler*innen eine Neubewertung dieses historischen Aktes zivilen Ungehorsams aus heutiger Perspektive vor. Die Veranstaltung war eine Kooperation von Schauspiel Frankfurt, Jüdisches Museum Frankfurt, Fritz Bauer Institut und der Theaterwissenschaft der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, ein Mitschnitt der Veranstaltung ist auf YouTube unter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ysdsk0eJvQU abrufbar.
Federn lesen : eine Literaturgeschichte des Gänsekiels von den Anfängen bis ins 19. Jahrhundert
(2021)
Vom Mittelalter bis zur Einführung der Stahlfeder im 19. Jahrhundert war die Gänsefeder das meistgebrauchte Schreibwerkzeug in Europa. Doch um als Schreibfeder genutzt werden zu können, musste der Gänsekiel mit großem Können zugespitzt und bearbeitet werden. Das Wissen um die Techniken der Fertigung und des Gebrauchs sind größtenteils verschollen.
Martina Wernli hat intensiv geforscht und versammelt nun Quellen aus unterschiedlichen Sprachen. Sie zeigt, wie die Gänsefeder die europäische Schriftkultur über Jahrhunderte geprägt hat und wie dem Schreibwerkzeug von Anfang an zudem eine übertragene Bedeutung zukam, denn die Feder steht auch für Schreibprozesse und literarisches Schreiben selbst. Die komparatistisch ausgerichtete Analyse verdeutlicht, wie sich in der Feder bildliches Sprechen und materielle Grundlage gegenseitig bedingen. Eine spannende Ding-, Medien-, Technik-, Kultur- und Literaturgeschichte.
Einst war eine Filmvorführung ein flüchtiges Ereignis, das außer schönen Erinnerungen im Gedächtnis des Publikums keine Spuren hinterließ. Heute, im Zeitalter des Streaming, setzt jeder Film einen digitalen Fußabdruck im Reich der Daten. Und nicht nur das: Der Film selbst hat sich mit der digitalen Transformation grundlegend verändert und neue Formen und Formate entwickelt. Diese Umbrüche stellen das kleine Fach Filmwissenschaft vor große Herausforderungen – und bieten zugleich neue Chancen für Forschung und Lehre. In den kommenden fünf Jahren wird ein Team aus Filmwissenschaftlerinnen und Filmwissenschaftlern der Universitäten Marburg, Mainz und Frankfurt im »Digital Cinema-Hub« (DiCi-Hub) erforschen, wie diesen Herausforderungen und Chancen begegnet werden kann. Das Projekt wird von der VolkswagenStiftung im Rahmen der Förderlinie »Weltwissen – Strukturelle Stärkung Kleiner Fächer« mit 1 Million Euro gefördert.
DiCi-Hub stellt drei Schlüsselbereiche der Filmkultur ins Zentrum – nämlich Netzwerke (Philipps-Universität Marburg), Formate (Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz) und Märkte (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt).
Der UniReport hatte die Gelegenheit, dem Filmwissenschaftler Prof. Vinzenz Hediger, der an der Goethe-Universität den Schlüsselbereich »Märkte« verantworten wird, einige Fragen zu stellen.
The role of music in second-language (L2) learning has long been the object of various empirical and theoretical inquiries. However, research on whether the effect of background music (BM) on language-related task performance is facilitative or inhibitory has produced inconsistent findings. Hence, we investigated the effect of happy and sad BM on complexity, accuracy, and fluency (CAF) of L2 speaking among intermediate learners of English. A between-groups design was used, in which 60 participants were randomly assigned to three groups with two experimental groups performing an oral L2 English retelling task while listening to either happy or sad BM, and a control group performing the task with no background music. The results demonstrated the happy BM group’s significant outperformance in fluency over the control group. In accuracy, the happy BM group also outdid the controls (error-free clauses, correct verb forms). Moreover, the sad BM group performed better in accuracy than the controls but in only one of its measures (correct verb forms). Furthermore, no significant difference between the groups in syntactic complexity was observed. The study, in line with the current literature on BM effects, suggests that it might have specific impacts on L2 oral production, explained by factors such as mood, arousal, neural mechanism, and the target task’s properties.
David Rothenberg, a philosophy professor and Jazz musician, has been improvising with nonhuman animals for years, among his playing partners are birds and whales, known to be territorial animals. As Deleuze and Guattari propose that the origin of art is precisely the territorialising animal and more a function of nature than a specifically human cultural achievement, their concept of territory and rhythm offers a non-anthropocentric way of looking at these encounters. Rothenberg’s sonic experiments in resonance and interspecies interaction do not rely on language, thus I argue that the human and the nonhuman animals form a temporary joint territory via sonic rhythms and engage in a mutual becoming by forming a rhizome. His sound thinking practice thus also helps in decentralising further anthropocentric models of music and art.
In this work, we intend to investigate one fundamental aspect of language contact by comparing the distribution of subjects in German, Northern Italian dialects and Cimbrian. Here, we show that purely syntactic order phenomena are more prone to convergence, i.e., less resilient, while phenomena that have a clearly identifiable morphological counterpart are more resilient. The empirical domain of investigation for our analysis is the morphosyntax of both nominal and pronominal subjects, the agreement pattern and their position in Cimbrian grammar. While agreement patterns display a highly conservative paradigm, the syntax of nominal (vP-peripheral and topicalized) subjects is innovative and mimics the Italian linear word order.