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Seit etwa drei Jahrzehnten erhalten Literaturwissenschaftler von den Kognitionswissenschaften für ihre Forschungen wichtige Impulse. Bis heute jedoch herrscht Klärungsbedarf in Bezug auf die biologischen Grundlagen unserer Kultur bzw. hinsichtlich der neuronalen Voraussetzungen semantischer Prozesse innerhalb der literarischen Kommunikation. Der Band soll ein Abbild vermitteln, wie Forscher mit unterschiedlichen (meta-)theoretischen Hintergründen mit der Anwendung der grundlegenden Konzepte der Kognitiven Literaturwissenschaft umgehen und dabei zeigen, inwiefern kognitionswissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse für literaturwissenschaftliche Fragestellungen fruchtbar gemacht werden können. Zu diesem Zweck wird der Fokus auf das dynamische Zusammenspiel von Textelementen und kognitiven Leistungen vor kulturhistorischem Hintergrund gerichtet. Um das entsprechend breite Spektrum der Möglichkeiten der Kognitiven Literaturwissenschaft sichtbar zu machen, sind die Anwendungsbereiche Text, Leser und Kontext gleichermaßen vertreten.
Kognitive Poetik. --- Psycholinguistics --- Literature --- Cognition in literature. --- Belles-lettres --- Western literature (Western countries) --- World literature --- Philology --- Authors --- Authorship --- Literature and philosophy --- Philosophy and literature --- Philosophy. --- Psychological aspects. --- Theory
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History of Europe --- anno 1800-1899 --- Nationalism in literature. --- Nationalism --- Nationalism. --- History --- Europe. --- Nationalisme --- Romanticism --- Romantisme --- Nationalism and the arts --- Nationalisme et art --- Histoire
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Figurative art, Italian --- Human beings in art --- Human body in literature --- Italian literature --- History and criticism --- Corps humain dans la litterature --- Litterature italienne --- Corps humain dans l'art --- Peinture moderne --- Italie --- 20e siecle
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We are reaching a point in history when the generation who experienced the Holocaust as survivors, witnesses or exiles will soon disappear. What happens to our relationship to such a momentous event in global history when our living connection with such a past is broken? To answer this question, this article will explore recent French representations of the Holocaust through the comic book. It will approach such representations from the perspective of the grandchildren of those who were affected by the Holocaust, perhaps the last generation to have personal ties to this wartime past. It will focus specifically on Jérémie Dres's Nous n'irons pas voir Auschwitz (2011), translated as We Won't Go and See Auschwitz. As a "third generation" narrative, Dres's work is attentive to stories of Jewish exile and loss to be found on the margins of Holocaust histories. This perspective translates into an openness towards transnational histories of the Holocaust; a recognition of place as a substitute for living memory and an awareness of comics' potential to innovate in the transmission of Holocaust memories. Ultimately, this article will argue that the contemporary comic book acts as a privileged vehicle of remembrance, indicative of the reordering of Holocaust representations in an age of cultural memory.
E-books --- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) in literature. --- Comic books, strips, etc. --- Comic strips --- Comics --- Funnies --- Manga (Comic books, strips, etc.) --- Manhua (Comic books, strips, etc.) --- Manhwa (Comic books, strips, etc.) --- Serial picture books --- Caricatures and cartoons --- Wit and humor, Pictorial --- Manhua (Comic books) --- Manhwa (Comic books) --- Holocaust --- twenty-first century --- french comics --- Auschwitz concentration camp --- Comic book --- France --- Graphic novel --- Jérémie --- Jews --- Poland --- The Holocaust --- Warsaw
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This is a detailed study of the various ways in which London and India were imaginatively constructed by British observers during the nineteenth century. This process took place within a unified field of knowledge that brought together travel and evangelical accounts to exert a formative influence on the creation of London and India for the domestic reading public. Their distinct narratives, rhetoric and chronologies forged homologies between representations of the metropolitan poor and colonial subjects—those constituencies that were seen as the most threatening to imperial progress. Thus the poor and particular sections of the Indian population were inscribed within discourses of western civilization as regressive and inferior peoples. Over time, these discourses increasingly promoted notions of overt and rigid racial hierarchies, the legacy of which remains to this day.
Social change -- England -- London -- History -- 19th century. --- Urban poor -- England -- London -- History -- 19th century. --- Urban poor -- India -- History -- 19th century. --- Poor --- Social change --- Urban poor --- Imperialism --- Political Theory of the State --- Social Welfare & Social Work - General --- Political Science --- Social Welfare & Social Work --- Social Sciences --- Law, Politics & Government --- History --- London (England) --- India --- In literature. --- Civilization --- Public opinion. --- Change, Social --- Cultural change --- Cultural transformation --- Societal change --- Socio-cultural change --- Indland --- Ḣindiston Respublikasi --- Republic of India --- Bhārata --- Indii︠a︡ --- Inde --- Indië --- Indien --- Sāthāranarat ʻIndīa --- Yin-tu --- Bharat --- Government of India --- Londen (England) --- Londinium (England) --- Londres (England) --- Londýn (England) --- Social history --- Social evolution --- City dwellers --- インド --- Indo --- Social conditions. --- india --- empire --- british --- colonial --- London --- Humanities. --- History. --- Colonialism & Imperialism. --- HISTORY / Asia / India & South Asia. --- Asian history --- Colonialism & imperialism
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