DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8...97
Hits 61 – 80 of 1.937

61
Greek studies at the State University of Saint Petersburg. A combination of research and teaching (full text in Greek) ...
BASE
Show details
62
Yніверби в терміносистемах східнослов’янських та новогрецької мов
Klymenko, Nina. - : Slavistički komitet Sarajevo, 2018
BASE
Show details
63
Some general thoughts on tense and aspect in Modern Greek
In: Lingua Posnaniensis, Vol 60, Iss 2, Pp 39-54 (2018) (2018)
BASE
Show details
64
Kulturspezifischer Tempusgebrauch in der Fremdsprache Deutsch am Beispiel griechischer Lernender : Lernersprachenanalyse - kulturkontrastive Analyse
Monsela, Eirini. - Frankfurt am Main : Peter Lang Edition, 2017
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
65
Learning to read across languages and writing systems
Verhoeven, Ludo (Herausgeber); Perfetti, Charles (Herausgeber). - Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2017
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
66
Hellēnikes dialektoi ston archaio kosmo : actes du VIe Colloque international sur les dialectes grecs anciens (Nicosie, Universite de Chypre, 26-29 Septembre 2011)
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
67
The Greek future and its history : = Le futur grec et son histoire
Lambert, Frédéric (Herausgeber); Markopoulos, Theodore (Herausgeber); Allan, Rutger J. (Herausgeber). - Louvain-la-Neuve : Peeters, 2017
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
68
Direct objects and language acquisition
Pérez Leroux, Ana T.; Roberge, Yves; Pirvulescu, Mihaela. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2017
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
69
Morphological aspects of Pontic Greek spoken in Georgia
Berikašvili, Svetlana. - Muenchen : LINCOM GmbH, 2017
Institut für Empirische Sprachwissenschaft
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
70
Nominal compound acquisition
Kilani-Schoch, Marianne (Herausgeber); Dressler, Wolfgang U. (Herausgeber); Ketrez, F. Nihan (Herausgeber). - Amsterdam, Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2017
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
71
ЛИНГВОКУЛЬТУРНЫЕ ОСОБЕННОСТИ ТЕКСТОВ ЗАВЕЩАНИЙ НА НОВОГРЕЧЕСКОМ И РУССКОМ ЯЗЫКАХ
СТОЛЯРОВА АННА АНАТОЛЬЕВНА. - : Общество с ограниченной ответственностью «Международный центр науки и образования», 2017
BASE
Show details
72
Computational prediction of Greek Nominal Allomorphy ...
Karasimos, Athanasios. - : Selected papers on theoretical and applied linguistics, 2017
BASE
Show details
73
The discovery of Modern Greek as a second language ...
Moschonas, Spiros A.. - : Selected papers on theoretical and applied linguistics, 2017
BASE
Show details
74
"The Milk of Birds": A Proverbial Phrase, Ancient and Modern, and its Link to Nature
Payne, Martha J.. - : Athens Journal of Philology, 2017
BASE
Show details
75
A morphosemantic investigation of diminutive verbs in French and Modern Greek ...
Efthymiou, Angeliki. - : Mediterranean Morphology Meetings, 2017
BASE
Show details
76
Reflexive and Reciprocal Constructions in Modern Greek
In: The ITB Journal (2017)
BASE
Show details
77
Fluid Books, Fluid Borders Modern Greek and Turkish Book Networks in a Shifting Sea
Abstract: This dissertation tells the stories of a half dozen Greek and Turkish books that refused to “stay put”: books that, despite their appearance of stability today, moved across multiple media, editions, alphabets, bindings and geographies, taken apart and reassembled in deeply transformative ways during a period of momentous change in the Eastern Mediterranean, roughly 1910-1960. The signal event of this change was the Ottoman Empire’s collapse in 1923, after which the Greek and Turkish nation-states pushed to radically reshape the region through a series of partitions. Book networks too were being reassembled along national lines, a process whose ultimate aim was the production of a fixed national corpus, purified of linguistic and typographic variation. Nonetheless, careful examination suggests that many of the region’s textual networks were anything but stable or pure. The books of my study often blurred the boundaries between production, circulation and consumption, between writer and reader, and, at times, between Greek and Turkish. They behaved in many ways more like pre-modern manuscripts than modern books. I argue, in fact, that “the book has never been modern”—not even in the twentieth century, when it had supposedly been fixed in place by international copyright, national philology departments and commercial standardization. The narrative of twentieth-century fixity, frequently implicit and occasionally explicit in Book History, derives in part from the field’s Eurocentric origins. In the Greco-Turkish Mediterranean, a different story emerges. Building an innovative bridge between Book History and Mediterranean studies, I view the Greco-Turkish book as a “middle space”: a semi-fluid medium that, resisting the nation-state’s partitions, continued to be assembled and reassembled by a heterogeneous webwork of hands and materials. Methodologically, how does one approach such a “middle space”? Adapting Bruno Latour’s Actor-Network Theory and Deleuze and Guattari’s notion of “assemblage,” I treat the book as a network, one whose ongoing assemblage we can spread out across a flat and open plane. Since these assemblages are nested, in something close to a mathematical fractal, I trace similar patterns on several scales, ranging from the typographic to the aesthetic to the geographic. On every scale, I follow the fluid “border-crossings” of books, facilitated by their several handlers. To conceptualize these crossings, the concept of the metaphor is particularly useful. In both ancient and modern Greek, a metaphora is an act not only of (1) moving an aesthetic conceit between linguistic symbols (as in English); but, more fundamentally, of (2) physically moving an object from point A to B. As the books of my study aesthetically moved their handlers, so too did the handlers physically move the books forward in time and space, preserving them only by transformatively transmitting them through a series of hands and forms. Ultimately, I work my way towards the ideal of the “commons-place” book, which combines the commonplace book with notions of the political commons, asking how a material medium might become the site of collective, un-authorized literary production. The philologist’s role here, I argue, is nothing more or less than the “curation” of this book-network, reassembling both its literary objects and their human handlers in a shared space—one that will allow each actor to speak, to hear and be heard. Through such a curation, which necessarily invites the agencies of a heterogeneous (and contentious) multiplicity of handlers, we can begin to reassemble the commons.
Keyword: Actor-Network Theory; Assemblage; Book History; Mediterranean; Modern Greek literature; Turkish Literature
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/140801
BASE
Hide details
78
MODERN GREEK ORTHODOX SERMON: LINGUISTIC FEATURES
In: Передовое образование; 2017: ; 135-140 ; Advanced Education; 2017: Issue 7; 135-140 ; Новітня освіта; 2017: ; 2410-8286 ; 2409-3351 (2017)
BASE
Show details
79
Отойконимические гидронимы Крита (пер. с польск. Е. Д. Бондаренко) ; Cretan Hydronyms Derived from Settlement Names (transl. from Polish by E. D. Bondarenko)
Качиньска, Э.; Kaczyńska, E.. - : Издательство Уральского университета, 2017
BASE
Show details
80
Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Mediterranean and Europe, 1000 BC to 1000 AD
In: Zea E-Books (2017)
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8...97

Catalogues
309
36
299
0
1
82
32
Bibliographies
1.245
0
0
0
0
0
0
52
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
51
Online resources
160
2
5
42
Open access documents
207
10
0
0
8
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern