1,969 research outputs found
Die Medialität des Historischen und die Historizität des Medialen
Dass zwischen den Forschungsgebieten von Medien und Geschichte wichtige Verbindungen bestehen, zeigt sich in den aktuellen Diskussionen beider Disziplinen. Einerseits führt die Erkenntnis, dass Geschichte immer nur durch mediale Vermittlung zugänglich ist, zu einem wachsenden Interesse der Geschichtswissenschaft an kommunikationstheoretischen Fragestellungen. Andererseits hat der Klärungsbedarf der Medienwissenschaften an der Historizität ihrer Forschungsgegenstände in den letzten Jahren zahlreiche medienhistorische Arbeiten hervorgebracht.
In diesem Kontext zielt der Sammelband zu der Tagung "Medialität der Geschichte und Historizität der Medien" vom November 2002 an der Universität Konstanz auf die systematischen Grundlagen beider Fächer und die Möglichkeiten interdisziplinärer Fragestellungen und Methoden. Die Beiträge loten die Möglichkeiten eines interdisziplinären Austausches zwischen den Geschichts- und den Medienwissenschaften aus und eruieren gemeinsame methodische und thematische Arbeitsfelder
Tribute to Kay Boyle
for Ian Under a bright San Francisco starI earned my MA in Creative Writing at San Francisco State in 1968. I had the good fortune to have Kay Boyle standing in my proverbial corner. Kay is (I use the present tense because, once set down, literature is here to stay) an amazingly accomplished and well-versed author with some 40 published books to round out her long lifetime (1902-1992). Kay Boyle in Crowd, San Francisco State College Strike, 1968-1969 by Gerald Grow Throughout her writin..
Author Kay Kermode with Plant
Kathryn "Kay" Vassel Kermode with one of her plants. A long time agriculturalist in Manatee County, she is author of the 1995 book: Tomato Ties n Growers: a history of the tomato industry in West Florida
Marching the Streets of San Francisco With Novelist and Activist, Kay Boyle
In this wonderfully vivid piece, originally published in 2013 and now posted on LitHub, Marianne Goldsmith tells about marching the streets of San Francisco with Kay Boyle in the early 1970s. The author says she was inspired to revive it after the Jan 6th riot in Washington, D.C. "Marching the Streets of San Francisco With Novelist and Activist, Kay Boyle," http://disq.us/t/3wqn7rz Marianne Goldsmith is the pen-name of Marianne Smith. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. She holds ..
Poetische Sichtbarmachung. Poetische Sichtbarmachung. Be- und Erschreibungen in Tanzkritiken des 19. Jahrhunderts
Khoo Kay Kim, professor of Malaysian history : a biobibliometric study
Presents an analysis of the publication productivity, authorship pattern, channels of communication, journal preference and language preference of Professor Dato' Khoo Kay Kim, Professor of Malaysian History in the University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur. The results of this biobibliometric study indicate that he can be a role model for future Malaysian historians to emulate his various achievements especially in the field of history education
Definierbar ist nur, was keine Geschichte hat. Über Fortschritte der Medien und Wandlungen von Theater
Letter from Kay Yamashita to Pooh, November 1, 1942
Letter from Kay Yamashita to Pooh at the Sakai house, written from Topaz incarceration camp. Yamashita mentions the Student Relocation Council and activities of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, a scheduled visit from Caleb Foote, and the arrival of a new teacher at the camp high school, F.O.R. member Mary McMillan. Yamashita asks if Joe [Joseph R. Goodman] would be willing to come teach at the high school. Kay also writes of lack of adequate heating in the cold weather, and of censorship of the camp newsletter: "If you get a hold of one of our Topaz Times, now a daily news sheet, don't believe all - it's highly censored - about as much as our Tanforan newspaper was - they're afraid to let anything unpleasant or detrimental to the administration out." Yamashita also mention lack of available or willing workers for farm labor in the camp.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide
Fabio Crivellari / Kay Kirchmann / Marcus Sandl / Rudolf Schlögl (Hgg.): Die Medien der Geschichte [Rezension]
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