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David E. Wellbery

    1 gennaio 1947

    David E. Wellbery è un distinto professore di letteratura tedesca la cui erudizione approfondisce l'estetica e la semiotica dell'Illuminismo. Il suo lavoro illumina le intricate connessioni tra teoria letteraria, pensiero filosofico e contesto storico della storia letteraria tedesca. Attraverso i suoi contributi, offre profonde intuizioni su un'era cruciale dello sviluppo intellettuale europeo.

    Seiltänzer des Paradoxalen
    Positionen der Literaturwissenschaft
    Goethes Faust I
    Traditions of Experiment from the Enlightenment to the Present
    Chronotypes: the construction of time
    A new history of German literature
    • Chronotypes: the construction of time

      • 252pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Time belongs to a handful of categories (like form, symbol, cause) that are genuinely transdisciplinary. Time touches every dimension of our being, every object of our attention -- including attention itself. It therefore can belong to no single field of study. Of course, this universalist view of time is not itself universal but rather is a product of the modern age, an age that conceived of itself as the "new" time. Time has thus gained new importance as a theme of general research with the "post-modern turn" now manifest in many areas of intellectual endeavor, especially in the humanities and social sciences. "Chronotypes" are models or patterns through which time assumes practical or conceptual significance. Time is not given but (as the subtitle indicates) fabricated in an ongoing process. Chronotypes are themselves temporal and plural, constantly being made and remade at multiple individual, social, and cultural levels. They interact, they change over time, and they have histories, whose construal is itself an act of temporal construction. This book -- an interdisciplinary collaboration of philosophers, historians, literary critics, and anthropologists -- examines the ways individuals, societies, and cultures make sense of time by constructing it in diverse patterns.

      Chronotypes: the construction of time
      2,5
    • This collection features a diverse range of essays that explore the intersections of literature, philosophy, and socio-political themes in German and comparative literature. Claudia Brodsky examines "Experimental Philosophy" and the literature of experience in the works of Diderot and Kleist. Gisela Brude-Firnau delves into Alexander von Humboldt's sociopolitical intentions, merging science and poetics. Thomas P. Saine critiques Johann Gottfried Seume's views on traditional society at the end of the eighteenth century. Michael T. Jones discusses Friedrich Schlegel's "Lucinde" as an experimental novel. James Rolleston analyzes the allegorical dimensions of freedom in Lenau's poetry. Jeffrey L. Sammons investigates innovation and intertextuality in Charles Sealsfield's work. Peter Gay offers a reading of the Gartenlaube from 1890, while Brigitte Peucker connects German cinema with the sister arts through Wegener's "The Student of Prague." Ruth V. Gross reflects on György Kurtág's "Kafka Fragmente." Amy Colin refigures the female body through Romanian avant-gardists. Walter Hinderer explores the role of foreign elements in Brecht's "In the Jungle of the Cities." Mark Harman addresses German translations of Joyce's "Ulysses." Ellis Shookman investigates Arno Schmidt's relationship with James Fenimore Cooper. Marilyn Sibley Fries examines the historical debris in the works of Bachmann and Benjamin. Dorrit Cohn analyzes Wolfgang Hil

      Traditions of Experiment from the Enlightenment to the Present
    • Goethes Faust I

      Reflexion der tragischen Form

      • 100pagine
      • 4 ore di lettura
      Goethes Faust I
      4,0
    • Seiltänzer des Paradoxalen

      • 270pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      In meisterhaften Textlektüren beschäftigt sich der Literaturwissenschaftler David E. Wellbery mit maßgeblichen Werken der Moderne (u. a. Laurence Sternes „Tristram Shandy“, Goethes „Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre“, E. T. A. Hoffmanns „Prinzessin Brambilla“, Kafkas „Schweigen der Sirenen“ und Hofmannsthals „Chandos-Brief“), die neben dem Dargestellten auch die Bedingungen ihrer Darstellung reflektieren. Das Buch macht literarische Form sichtbar als einen seiltänzerischen Akt, der sich in prekärer Balance von Vollendung und Brüchigkeit je neu, je anders vollzieht.

      Seiltänzer des Paradoxalen