830 Literaturen germanischer Sprachen; Deutsche Literatur
Refine
Document Type
- Article (6)
- Review (4)
- Part of a Book (2)
Language
- German (12)
Has Fulltext
- yes (12)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (12)
Keywords
- Fachsprache (12) (remove)
Schmid versteht unter Fachliteratur – um die geht es, wie gesagt, zunächst – "eine beträchtliche Anzahl von profanen, nicht-fiktionalen Texten, die wissenschaftliche oder alltagspraktische Gegenstände behandeln". Allerdings notiert Schmid kurz darauf, dass mehrere Autoren anstelle von "'Fach- oder 'Fachsprache'", von "Fachliteratur" oder "Fachprosa" sprechen. Schmid betont dazu, dass es ihm eben weniger um literarische oder literaturhistorische Fragen geht, sondern vielmehr um fachsprachhistorische" Aspekte.
On history in the present day. Laudatio to Lenka Vaňková.
This paper takes as its starting point several statements by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the role of the German language in literary and scholarly life during Leibniz's era. The languages of scholarship were Latin and French, and Leibniz himself published in both these languages. German was the language of practical life. Viewed from this perspective, it was almost inevitable that medieval and early modern medicine - not in the sense of academic theory, but as a practical activity - developed its own fully-fledged specialist language, which was largely based on the vernacular. In her studies of the language of historical medicine, Lenka Vaňková has shown how such vernacular language was (and potentially still is) able to function in specialist domains.