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In: Universal- und kulturhistorische Studien. Studies in Universal and Cultural History
In: Springer eBook Collection
Battle descriptions as literary text: an introduction -- Year Names as Source for Military Campaigns in the Third Millennium BC -- Much Ado about Nothing? Battle Descriptions in Ugaritic Texts -- Victor without Victory? The Lack of Battle Descriptions in the Achaeamenid Empire -- Battle Descriptions in the Hebrew Bible: An Overview with Special Attention to the Book of Joshua.-Plataea, 479 BC -- "Eine Schlacht wie keine andere" – alles nur Literatur, oder was? Agesilaos II., Xenophon und der "Sieg" Spartas in der Schlacht bei Koroneia (14. August, 394 v. Chr.), der vielleicht eher doch eine Niederlage war! -- Parody as a Sign of Generic Consciousness: Battle Descriptions in the Pseudo-Homeric Batrachomyomachia -- The Battle of Gaugamela. A Case Study and Some General Methodological Considerations -- Die "Thermopylenschlacht 2.0" am Persischen Tor (330 v. Chr.) -- Battle Descriptions in Livy's Ab Urbe Condita -- Conversus ad pacem … (Flor. 2.34.65 = 4.12.65) – Battle Descriptions in Florus Reconsidered -- The Impact of Violence as Heroization Technique in Basini's Hesperis, Naldi's Volaterrais and Filelfo's Sphortias -- A Battle of Emperors? Contemporary Poetic and Prose Descriptions of Austerlitz (1805) -- The Impossibility of Deliberate Action in Tolstoy's Descriptions of Battle in War and Peace -- Historical Distance and Literary Re-Presentation. Ancient Battles in German Classical Studies.
While psychiatry and the neurosciences have dismissed the concept of neurosis as too vague for medical purposes, in recent years literary studies have adopted the term by virtue of its abstractness. This volume investigates the verbalization of neurosis in literary and cultural texts. As opposed to the medical diagnostics of neurosis in the individual, the contributions focus on the poetics of neurosis. They indicate how neuroses are still routinely romanticized or vilified, bent to suit aesthetic and narrative choices, and transfigured to illustrate unresolved cultural tensions.
In: Studies in American literature v. 27
In: Edition Kulturwissenschaft 161
In: Comparative literature and culture
Introduction1. Linguistics and literature2. Problematising the linguistic status quo -- The LeftHand of Darkness and Häutungen3. Proposing linguistic neutrality -- The Cook and theCarpenter and Woman on the Edge of Time4. Reversing the linguistic status quo -- Egalias døtre5. 'It's good to make people realise ... double standards' -- Evaluating the impact of literary texts thematising sex/gender and languageConclusionsWorks CitedIndex
In: University of Wisconsin studies in the social sciences and history 9
In: Psychoanalysis and Culture Ser.
In: Routledge Focus on Linguistics
This concise volume addresses the question of whether or not language, and its structure in literary discourses, determines individuals' mental "vision," employing an innovative cross-disciplinary approach using readers' drawings of their mental imagery during reading.
The book engages in critical dialogue with the perceived wisdom in stylistics rooted in Roger Fowler's seminal work on deixis and point of view to test whether or not this theory can fully account for what readers see in their mind's eye and how they see it. The work draws on findings from a study of English and Dutch across a range of literary texts, in which participants read literary text fragments and were then asked to immediately draw representations of what they had seen envisioned. Building on the work of Fowler and more recent theoretical and empirical language-based studies in the area, Klomberg, Schilhab, and Burke argue that models from embodied cognitive science can help account for anomalies in evidence from readers' drawings, indicating new ways forward for interdisciplinary understandings of individual meaning construction in literary textual interfaces.
This book will be of interest to students and scholars in stylistics, cognitive psychology, rhetoric, and philosophy, particularly those working in the field of embodied cognition.
In: Anglo-Saxon Studies v.Volume 38
In: ZAA monograph series 15
Modernisms. Modernism and its transformations -- "Perspectivism" -- The modernist experience -- Early modernism. The inward turn -- Decadence/aestheticism -- The realms of the text. Myth -- Symbol -- Structure -- Time and space. Time/history -- Spatial form -- From romance to nihilism. From romance to realism -- Authenticity in a counterfeit culture -- Neorealism and beyond -- Postmodernism and mass culture. Gender and race -- Mass culture -- Alone in the crowd -- Postmodernism
In: Corpus scriptorum Christianorum orientalium vol. 699
In: Subsidia tomus 147