Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (13318) (remove)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (3993)
- Postprint (3294)
- Doctoral Thesis (2527)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (970)
- Review (558)
- Part of Periodical (489)
- Preprint (446)
- Master's Thesis (264)
- Conference Proceeding (245)
- Working Paper (245)
Language
- German (7038)
- English (5980)
- Spanish (80)
- French (75)
- Multiple languages (62)
- Russian (62)
- Hebrew (9)
- Italian (6)
- Portuguese (2)
- Hungarian (1)
Keywords
- Germany (118)
- Deutschland (106)
- climate change (79)
- Sprachtherapie (77)
- Patholinguistik (73)
- patholinguistics (73)
- Logopädie (72)
- Zeitschrift (71)
- Nachhaltigkeit (61)
- European Union (59)
Institute
- Extern (1376)
- MenschenRechtsZentrum (943)
- Institut für Physik und Astronomie (714)
- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (708)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (583)
- Institut für Chemie (555)
- Institut für Mathematik (519)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (509)
- Institut für Romanistik (509)
- Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät (489)
Urbanity and literature
(2011)
Transarea studies focus upon spaces as created by the movements that criss-cross them. From this point of view, from its very beginnings, literature is closely interrelated with a vectorial (and much less with a purely spatial) conception of history - and with urbanity, which plays a decisive role in Gilgamesh's travels through a (narrative) cosmos centered upon the city of Uruk. This article explores the city as a transareal space of movement in three examples of literature, with no fixed abode, around the turn of the millennium, i.e. Assia Djebar's Les Nuits de Strasbourg, Emine Sevgi Oezdamar's Istanbul-Berlin Trilogy, and Cecile Wajsbrot's L'ile aux musees. These three writers project, in a very specific way, cities in motion as anagrammatic and fractal structures.
El manuscrito “Isle de Cube. Antilles en général” de Alejandro de Humboldt se puede comprender como el título para todo un archipiélago de textos. Su estructuración radicalmente abierta nos proporciona la idea de un modo de escribir y más aún de pensar de este explorador de cultura y naturaleza. Sus miniaturas textuales registran la complejidad política y social del mundo insular del Caribe de forma relacional y polilógica. En combinación con sus mapas cubanos y el Essai politique sur l’île de Cuba, este manuscrito hace de Humboldt un escritor prominente de la literatura cubana del siglo XIX.
Magic screens
(2016)
Garcilaso de la Vega el Inca, for several centuries doubtlessly the most discussed and most eminent writer of Andean America in the 16th and 17th centuries, throughout his life set the utmost value on the fact that he descended matrilineally from Atahualpa Yupanqui and from the last Inca emperor, Huayna Capac. Thus, both in his person and in his creative work he combined different cultural worlds in a polylogical way. (1) Two painters boasted that very same Inca descent - they were the last two great masters of the Cuzco school of painting, which over several generations of artists had been an institution of excellent renown and prestige, and whose economic downfall and artistic marginalization was vividly described by the French traveller Paul Mancoy in 1837.(2) While, during the 18th century, Cuzco school paintings were still much cherished and sought after, by the beginning of the following century the elite of Lima regarded them as behind the times and provincial, committed to an 'indigenous' painting style. The artists from up-country - such was the reproach - could not keep up with the modern forms of seeing and creating, as exemplified by European paragons. Yet, just how 'provincial', truly, was this art?
Khal Torabully
(2017)
Khal Torabully creates poetry and a poetics for those forgotten by history, a theorem and theory which construct a tangible and sensual landscape, allowing for an empathetically shared experience and expressing the dramatic climax of the third phase of accelerated globalization: a project that would be unthinkable without the cultural theory we now have at our disposal in the present surge of globalization. In his poetic and theoretical texts, he has paid a literary tribute to the Coolies, usually from India, but also China and many other countries. Given Torabully’s Mauritian roots, but also the worldwide migration of the Coolies themselves, the world of Coolitude is culturally and linguistically extremely diverse, making the act of translation very relevant and giving it multiple meanings. Literature brings these forgotten lives back to life and allows us to share this experience thanks to its aesthetic force. It traces the movements, which sketch trajectories functioning to this day as palimpsest-like vectors of our own paths and trajectories. The author of Chair Corail, Fragments Coolies breaks the chain of mutual exclusions, replacing it with a type of writing belonging to a wider array of expressive modes which in diasporic situations unleash polylogical and archipelagic imaginaries.
During his American expedition Humboldt grappled intensively with the iniquities of colonialism. In the year 1803, for example, he noted "that the idea of a colony is itself an immoral idea, this idea of a land which is obliged to pay dues to another country." The colonial powers, wrote Humboldt, support intolerance, repression and slavery. However, he did not express his criticism in public during the expedition but entrusted it only to good friends and his diary. The lecture treats Humboldt's political stance during the expedition, based on human rights and his communicative role as a research traveller who, having returned to Europe, made his criticism public. Central to the lecture are examples of Humboldt's criticism of representatives of the colonial system. These make clear which important impulses the researcher gave to the independence movement and to the politicians of the young American states.
Paris/Berlin/Havanna
(2019)
Zweifellos war Paris mit seinen renommierten wissenschaftlichen Institutionen, seinen Verlagen und wissenschaftlichen Zirkeln, aber auch mit seinen Salons als großes europäisches Zentrum für Alexander von Humboldt der ideale Ort, um seine wissenschaftlichen Arbeiten voranzutreiben und jene sich beschleunigende Zirkulation von Wissen zu beobachten, die seine eigenen Arbeiten beflügelte. Und dennoch war die Entwicklung seines Lebens-Werkes weniger mit einem bestimmten konkreten Ort als vielmehr mit einer Vektorizität verknüpft. Diese tritt in allen Schriften Humboldts in den Überlagerungen der unterschiedlichsten Orte und Landschaften zutage. Quer zu den bis heute in ihren Dimensionen wie in ihren Ergebnissen erstaunlichen Reisen Humboldts zeigt sich eine oszillierende Bewegung, die über einen Zeitraum von nahezu sechs Jahrzehnten Berlin, Potsdam und Paris mit der ‚Neuen Welt‘ und den Debatten um letztere verband.
Faszination AvH
(2019)
Alexander von Humboldts Forschungsreise in die Neue Welt ist ein Gründungsmoment moderner Wissenschaft. Sie liefert uns Impulse und Grundlagen für ein 21. Jahrhundert, das im Zeichen des Zusammendenkens und Zusammenlebens stehen muss. Von der lange verschütteten Tradition einer Humboldt’schen Wissenschaft aus lassen sich heute, am Ausgang unserer aktuellen Globalisierungsphase, neue Zukünfte denken und entfalten. Das Zusammendenken von Natur und Kultur im Horizont einer Ökologie, die sich mit Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftsstrukturen vernetzt; der Entwurf einer Kosmopolitik, die nicht auf Machtasymmetrie, Inferiorisierung und Abhängigkeit abzielt, sondern die Zirkulation von Wissen zur Grundlage einer sich demokratisierenden Weltgesellschaft macht: Dies sind Kreuzungspunkte eines Denkens, das nicht nur an Aktualität, sondern im Zeichen neu entfachter Nationalismen, neuer Fundamentalismen und neuer globaler Ausgrenzungen vor allem an Dringlichkeit gewonnen hat.
Dieser Beitrag präsentiert die epistemischen Veränderungen, die von der Entdeckungsreise zur Forschungsreise führten, im Lichte jener Auseinandersetzungen, die als „Berliner Debatte um die Neue Welt“ berühmt wurden. Alexander von Humboldt bemerkte und beschrieb um die Wende zum 19. Jahrhundert eine fundamentale Epochenschwelle, die er im Vorwort zu seinen Vues des Cordillères et Monumens des Peuples Indigènes de l’Amérique als eine „glückliche Revolution“ bezeichnete. Diese Revolution schloss für Humboldt auch die Tatsache mit ein, die Aufklärung nicht als eine rein europäische, sondern als eine transatlantische und weltumspannende philosophische Bewegung zu verstehen.
Amerika in Asien
(2007)
Since 1793, Alexander von Humboldt had been dreaming of realizing a travel to Russia, leading him right into Central Asia. In 1829, he finally was able to see his dream fulfilled, although the contexts and conditions of his travel to Russia were totally different from those of his voyage to the Americas, realized some thirty years earlier. Severely controlled by the Russian monarchy, the travellers made it up to the Chinese border, rapidly crossing, within very few months and with the help of more than 12000 horses, more than 18000 kilometers. This article analizes the outstanding importance of Humboldt's Asian project in the context of Humboldtian Science, specially focussing the relevance of TransArea studies within its omnipresent AsiAmerican dimensions. Therefore, Asie centrale occupies a highly specific place within the complex cosmos of Humboldt's writings, highlighting a fascinating transdisciplinary and geoecological approach still of great importance today.