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Eva, Sphinx und Amazone
(2001-07)
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One and All in CALL? Learner–Moderator–Researcher
(2001)
In this article I will present the results of a research project on CALL and on cooperative learning in CALL, conducted as a democratic joint venture between teachers and students in the university setting over the last couple of years. The project consists of several sub-studies, all of which deal with the three-folded perspective I consider as most crucial for 21st century students: learning, moderating, doing research. This is particularly true for those students who have decided and who are willing to commit ...
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Die Wahrnehmung Jerusalems auf mittelalterlichen Weltkarten (Textversion)
(Bauer, Dieter (u.a.) (Hrsg.), 2001)
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Richard Schaukal und die Lyriktheorie der Jahrhundertwende
(2001)
Richard Schaukal (1874–1942), one of the authors of "Jung Wien," not only wrote poetry but also developed his own poetic and aesthetic theories. This article situates him vis-à-vis Stefan George and Arno Holz, setting his aesthetics of genius apart from the conventional division of fin-de-siècle literature into symbolism and naturalism.
Aufsatz
Double hegemony?
(2001)
The paper introduces research on transatlantic relations done by neo-Gramscian authors. This research is distinctive by focusing on class in international relations and by using the concept of hegemony in a relational sense. Hegemony is leadership through the active consent of other classes and groups. A central question of this neo-Gramscian research is whether an international class of capitalists has emerged. Some authors have answered in the positive. This paper, however, maintains that hegemony in the international ...
Aufsatz
Eros and Thanatos in Ernest Hemingway's "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" and Angela Carter's "Master"
(Universität Kassel, FB 08, Anglistik, Romanistik, 2001)
According to Hemingway all good prose has the dignity and draught of an iceberg. This is especially true of Hemingway's short stories.
"Francis Macomber" counts among the best composed short stories in English. Interpretation sways between Hemingway's idealisation of the male code and its deconstruction. Is the White Hunter a British scourge of American values or is Margot the tragic victim of a newly founded male friendship? Is the open ending rather a hunting accident or the mean murder of an unloved spouse? ...