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Der gebürtige Wiener Wolfgang von Weisl (1896-1974) ist der bedeutendste und radikalste revisionistische Zionist österreichischer Herkunft. Er hat nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg mit enormem, vielfältigem und auch militantem Einsatz als Politiker, Arzt, Offizier, Ökonom, Kolonist, Vortragender, Schriftsteller und Journalist an der Wegbereitung eines unabhängigen jüdischen Staates in Palästina mitgewirkt. Sein Lebenswerk, seine Autobiographie und seine zahlreichen politischen und literarischen Schriften - Zeitungsartikel, orientalische Sach- und Reisebücher, medizinische und religionspsychologische Abhandlungen, Gedichte, erzählende und dramatische Texte - sind bisher noch unerforscht. Diese vom Österreichischen Wissenschaftsfonds (FWF) geförderte, kommentierte und ausführlich monographisch eingeleitete Edition der beiden autobiographischen Texte Wolfgang von Weisls, "Lang ist der Weg ins Vaterland" und "Der Weg nach Latrun", leistet einen ersten grundlegenden Beitrag.
Prose: non-fiction --- History --- 20. Jahrhundert --- Israel --- Zionismus --- Europa --- Geschichte --- Neueste --- Habsburger --- Monarchie --- Weltkrieg
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The reception history of the term autofiction, coined by Serge Doubrovsky in 1977 and strongly polarising since then, shows that autofictional writing has been used by numerous authors in the past decades as a possibility to give explosive insights into their lives on the one hand, but to refer to an indeterminable ""fictional"" part of their work on the other. The underlying interferences between fictional and factual narrative strategies seem to predestine autofiction for the representation and provocation of scandal. This volume brings together contributions that illuminate the relationship between autofiction and scandal from epistemological, literary-historical and reception-aesthetic perspectives and explore ethical questions of the demarcation between public and private space.
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This book investigates the crucial question of 'restitution' in the work of W. G. Sebald. Written by leading scholars from a range of disciplines, with a foreword by his English translator Anthea Bell, the essays collected in this volume place Sebald's oeuvre within the broader context of European culture in order to better understand his engagement with the ethics of aesthetics. Whilst opening up his work to a range of under-explored areas including dissident surrealism, Anglo-Irish relations, contemporary performance practices and the writings of H. G. Adler, the volume notably returns to the original German texts. The recurring themes identified in the essays - from Sebald's carefully calibrated syntax to his self-consciousness about 'genre', from his interest in liminal spaces to his literal and metaphorical preoccupation with blindness and vision - all suggest that the 'attempt at restitution' constitutes the very essence of Sebald's understanding of literature. "This book investigates the crucial question of 'restitution' in the work of W. G. Sebald. Written by a range of leading scholars from fields as various as translation studies, English, German, and comparative literature, photography, critical theory, psychoanalysis, poetry, and art theory, the essays collected in the volume place Sebald's oeuvre within the broader context of European culture in order better to understand his engagement with the ethics of aesthetics. Whilst opening up his work to a range of under-explored areas - including dissident surrealism, Anglo-Irish relations, contemporary performance practices, and the writings of H. G. Adler - the volume also brings renewed impetus to the standard view of Sebald as a 'Holocaust writer'; following the lead established by his English translator Anthea Bell in her foreword, the essays all share a close attention to linguistic detail, returning to the original German texts in an attempt to do justice to Sebald's complex literary style. The recurring themes identified over the course of the collection - from Sebald's carefully calibrated syntax to his self-consciousness about 'genre', from his interest in liminal spaces to his literal and metaphorical preoccupation with blindness and vision - all suggest that the 'attempt at restitution' is both a thematic preoccupation and a narrative technique, and that as such it arguably constitutes the very essence of Sebald's understanding of literature. The volume will thus appeal not only to students and scholars of Sebald, but to anyone with a serious interest in the problems and possibilities of postwar European writing." --Back cover.
Sebald, W. G. --- זבאלד, וו. --- Sebald, Max, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Literature --- Prose: Non-Fiction --- LITERARY CRITICISM / General --- Germany --- Anglo-Irish history. --- Austerlitz. --- Corsica Project. --- English translations. --- Franz Kafka. --- H.G. Adler. --- Holocaust. --- Surrealism. --- The Emigrants. --- The Rings of Saturn. --- Vertigo. --- W. G. Sebald. --- blindness. --- collective memories. --- imagination. --- individual memories. --- photographic images. --- restitution. --- unwords.
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Rethinking the university explores and develops key critical debates in the humanities (concerning, for example, postmodernism, New Historicism, political criticism, cultural studies, interdisciplinarity and deconstruction) in the context of the various crises widely felt to be facing academic institutions. The analysis of the characteristic features of today's university is guided by a close reading of Derrida's work on the question of the academic institution, particularly with regard to the motifs of leverage and disorientation.This important topic has been the subject of heated debate in recent years and Rethinking the university offers clear and concise summaries of current work in the field as well as exploring original and challenging lines of enquiry on a number of issues of contemporary concern. In particular, Wortham argues that while Derrida's image of a university 'walking on two feet' presents us with a potentially paralysing problem, nevertheless it also enables a strong affirmation of the possibilities of academic life, work and effort.
Education, Higher --- Aims and objectives. --- Philosophy. --- LITERARY CRITICISM / General. --- Literature --- Prose: Non-Fiction --- LITERARY CRITICISM / General --- Literature: history & criticism --- Social aspects. --- academic institutions. --- cultural materialism. --- disorientation. --- economic pressures. --- historicism. --- ideological pressures. --- intellectual history. --- interdisciplinary approach. --- legitimation crisis. --- leverage. --- modern humanities. --- political pressures.
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This book is about reading practice and experience in late medieval and early modern England. It focuses on the kinds of literatures that were more readily available to the widest spectrum of the population. Four case studies from many possibilities have been selected, each examining a particular type of popular literature under the headings 'religious', 'moral', 'practical' and 'fictional'. A key concern of the book is how we might use particular types of evidence in order to understand more about reading practice and experience, so issues of method and approach are discussed fully in the opening chapter. One distinctive element of this book is that it attempts to uncover evidence for the reading practices and experiences of real, rather than ideal, readers, using evidence that is found within the material of a book or manuscript itself, or within the structure of a specific genre of literature. Salter attempts to negotiate a path through a set of methodological and interpretive issues in order to arrive at a better understanding of how people may have read and what they may have read. This, in turn, leads on to how we may interpret the evidence that manuscripts and early printed books provide for the ways that medieval and early modern people engaged with reading. This book will be of interest to academics and research students who study the history of reading, popular culture, literacy, manuscript and print culture, as well as to those interested more generally in medieval and early modern society and culture.
English literature --- Books and reading --- Appraisal of books --- Books --- Choice of books --- Evaluation of literature --- Literature --- Reading, Choice of --- Reading and books --- Reading habits --- Reading public --- Reading --- Reading interests --- Reading promotion --- History and criticism. --- History --- Appraisal --- Evaluation --- Great Britain --- Intellectual life --- Prose: Non-Fiction --- LITERARY CRITICISM / General --- Biography & non-fiction prose --- English. --- early modern England. --- fictional literature. --- literary form. --- literary voice. --- manuscript. --- material evidence. --- moral reading. --- page layout. --- popular reading. --- practical texts. --- printed book. --- reading experience. --- reading practice. --- religious texts.
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"This volume contains a critical edition, with an English translation and notes, of 20 chapters of the Semeioseis gnomikai ("Sententious notes") of the Byzantine statesman Theodore Metochites (1270-1332).The introduction gives an extensive, partly new, description and assessment of the manuscripts as physical objects and in their relationship to each other. The manuscripts discussed, and used in the edition, are the Par. gr. 2003 (P) and Marc. gr. 532 (M), both of the fourteenth century, and, wherever M is illegible, the Scor. gr. 248 (E), a sixteenth-century copy of M. In the edition, the reading of P (including the corrections by the main copyist, Michael Klostomalles, as well as a manus secunda) is generally adopted as the authoritative text. The volume concludes with a bibliography, an index of passages, and an index of names. The discussion in the essays touches upon several subjects, more or less related to each other. Among these are the ignorance of man and the difficulty to know anything, and the moral side of seeking an active life as opposed to "living hidden."
Authors, Classical --- Rhetoric, Ancient --- Philosophy, Ancient --- Ecrivains anciens --- Rhétorique ancienne --- Philosophie ancienne --- Ouvrages avant 1800 --- Classical texts --- Prose: non-fiction --- Literary essays --- Humanities --- Ethics & moral philosophy --- Metochites, Theodoros, --- Translations into English. --- Greece --- History --- Philosophy. --- Metochita, Theodore, --- Metochita, Theodorus, --- Métochite, Théodore, --- Metochites, Theodore, --- Metochites, Theodorus, --- Theodore Metochita, --- Théodore Métochite, --- Theodore Metochites, --- Theodoros Metochites, --- Theodorus Metochita, --- Theodorus Metochites, --- Theoleptos, --- al-Yūnān --- Ancient Greece --- Ellada --- Ellas --- Ellēnikē Dēmokratia --- Elliniki Dimokratia --- Grčija --- Grèce --- Grecia --- Gret︠s︡ii︠a︡ --- Griechenland --- Hellada --- Hellas --- Hellenic Republic --- Hellēnikē Dēmokratia --- Kingdom of Greece --- République hellénique --- Royaume de Grèce --- Vasileion tēs Hellados --- Xila --- Yaṿan --- Yūnān --- Ελληνική Δημοκρατία --- Ελλάς --- Ελλάδα --- Греция --- اليونان --- يونان --- 希腊
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