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Field Studies

German Language, Media and Culture

by Holger Briel (Volume editor) Carol Fehringer (Volume editor)
©2005 Conference proceedings 314 Pages
Series: CUTG Proceedings, Volume 5

Summary

The fifteen essays in this volume reflect the diversity of German studies in Britain and Ireland today.
The German language itself is the focus of four studies, covering historical aspects of German and Yiddish, language pedagogy and controversial contemporary issues, such as the rise of Anglicisms in German and the language of second- and third-generation immigrants. Traditional literary philology is also well represented in six essays on prose writers and dramatists from the nineteenth century to the present day, but it is a traditional philology that has been much modified and enriched by the cultural and historical perspectives evident in the remaining five essays. These include psychoanalytical and contextual studies and embrace the historical development and elaboration of mass media technologies from radio to public-access cable TV.

Details

Pages
314
Year
2005
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039103096
Language
English
Keywords
Germanistik Kongress Newcastle-upon-Tyne (2002) Jiddisch Kanak Sprak Anglicism in German German Literature Anglizismen im Deutschen Großbritannien Auslandsgermanistik
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2005. 314 pp.

Biographical notes

Holger Briel (Volume editor) Carol Fehringer (Volume editor)

The Editors: Holger Briel teaches German and Media Studies at the University of Surrey. He has published on literary theory, electronic media and contemporary German and English literature and society. Carol Fehringer teaches German and Dutch at the University of Newcastle. Her research area is theoretical linguistics and has published a variety of articles on Germanic morphology and phonology. She has also written a reference grammar of Dutch and a pedagogical grammar of German.

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Title: Field Studies