586 research outputs found
Kiri tundmatule
Schultz, Georg Peter, 1680-?, filosoof ja jurist, prof. Toruni gümnaasiumisSaadab adressaadile Gelehrtes Preussen järje
Kiri G. S. Bayer'ile
Schultz, Georg Peter, 1680-?, filosoof ja jurist, prof. Toruni gümnaasiumisBayer, Gottlieb (Theophil) Siegfried, 1694-1738, orientalist, prof. Königsbergis ja Peterburis, Peterburi TA liigeSaadab oma teose Gelehrtes Preussen järgmise vihiku ja kirjutab raskustest Toruni gümnaasiumis ning oma tööst Gelehrtes Preussen väljaandmise
Der Spinozismus im Jüdenthumb, oder, Die von dem heütigen Jüdenthumb und dessen Geheimen Kabbala vergötterte Welt : an Mose Germano sonsten Johan Peter Speeth ...
befunden und widerleget von Johann Georg WachterDirected against Johann Peter Spaeth ("Moses Germanus"), the Hebraic scholar who had assisted Knorr von Rosenroth with the Cabala Denudata & who was successively Catholic, Lutheran, Socinian, Mennonite, & Jew; dedicated by the young author to his father, Gabriel Wachter, the mayor of Memmingen; rich in its information about the occult circles of the day & their interrelation
Musikstädte as real and imaginary soundscapes: urban musical images as literary motifs in twentieth-century German modernism
PhDThis study examines German literary images of musical life as part of the wider sound identity of the modern German city at the turn of the twentieth century. Focussing on a forty-year period from 1890 to 1930, synonymous with the emergence of the modern German metropolis as an aesthetic object, the project assesses, compares and contrasts how musical life in the Musikstädte was perceived and portrayed by writers in an increasingly noisy urban environment. How does urban musical life influence and condition city writings? What are the differences and similarities between the writings on various musical cities? Can an urban textual sound identity be derived from these differences and similarities? The approach employed to answer these questions is a new, cross-disciplinary one to urban sound in literature, moving beyond reading the key sounds of the urban soundscape using urban musicology, sensorial anthropology and cultural poetics towards a literary contextualisation of the urban aural experience.
The literary motifs of the symphony, the gramophone and urban noise are put under the spotlight through the analysis of a wide range of modernist works by authors who have a special relationship with music. At the centre of this analysis are the Kaffeehausliteratur authors Hermann Bahr, Alfred Polgar and Peter Altenberg, the then Munich-based author Thomas Mann and the lesser known René Schickele. The analysis of these particular works is framed in the music-geographical context of the Musikstadt and literary underpinnings of this topos, ranging from Ingeborg Bachmann to Hans Mayer and, once again, Thomas Mann. In analysing these texts, the methodological approach devised by Strohm, who identifies the blending of a range of urban sounds as a definition of urban space and identity, is applied. His ideas combine historical literary
analysis, musical history and urban sociology. They are rarely used in the analysis of the auditory environment.Arts and Humanities Research Council
Westfield TrustWestfield Trust Studentship
Arts and Humanities Reseach Council (AHRC
Dissertatio De Mundo Universe Spectato ...
Quam ... Præside ... Joh. Henr. Svicero ... pensiculandam exhibet Joh. Henricus Brennwaldius, Phil. Cand. Author & respondens ...Dedikation an Joh. Heinrich Escher, Joh. Caspar Escher (2), Joh. Rudolf Escher, Joh. Caspar Schulthess, Joh. Rudolf Cramer, Joh. Heinrich Brennwald und Salomon Brennwald auf dem Titelblatt verso. Gedichte von Peter Lochmann, Joh. Caspar Hurter, Joh. Heinrich Schweizer, Joh. Caspar Sulzer und Georg Perin auf den Seiten 15-16Diss. Hohe Schule Zürich, 169
Als Des Durchlauchtigsten ... Herrn Christian Ulrichs, Hertzogs zu Würtemberg und Teck, auch in Schlesien zur Oels, Grafen zu Mompelgard ... Erfreulicher Geburths-Tag Auff dieser ... Universität von allen beehret wurde, Hat seine ... Freude ... Durch Einem getreuen Wunsch ... bezeugen und denselben ... übergeben wollen Georg. Petrus Schultz / D.
Disputationis theologicae, in caput X. confessionis Helveticae, pars prior : de praedestinatione Dei et electione sanctorum
quam ... sub praesidio ... Ioh. Henrici Heideggeri ... defendendam suscipit Thomas Veres-Egyhazi, Hungarus, author & respondens ...Dedikation an Stephan Dobozi, Johannes Erdödi, Andrea Balyk, Peter Csoka, Stephan Munkatsi, Johannes Kapolnasi, Matthaeus Pesti, Stephan Fenyes, Baltasar Barta, Peter Isa, Paul Pataki, Peter Nagy, Stephan Comaromi, Georg Martonfalvi, Georg Krizbai, Martin Szilagyi und Dionysius Bamfi auf Bl. A1v.Text teilw. arab. und hebr.Diss. Hohe Schule Zürich, 167
Das >Buch von Naturen der Ding< des Peter Königschlacher
From ancient times encyclopaedias have been compiled in order to collect contemporary knowledge about the world. One of the most complex works of this kind was written by Isidor of Seville in the 7th century. As a result of developments in the fields of science, medicine and philosophy, new encyclopaedias were written with specific aims in mind: for example, for religious purposes (>De rerum naturis< by Hrabanus Maurus) or as handbooks for scholars (>Apex physicae< by an anonymous author). Many university libraries acquired Bartholomaeus Anglicus' > Liber de proprietatibus<, which was also translated into English, Dutch, and other languages. The >Liber de natura rerum<, compiled by Thomas of Chantimpré in the 13th century, was translated into German five times. One of its translators was a 15t1, century school teacher and lawyer, Peter Königschlacher, who lived in the south German town of Saulgau. As the nobleman Truchsess Georg von Waldburg wanted to possess his own encyclopaedia, he asked Königschlacher to translate Thomas' text for him. This present study gives details about Königschlacher's life, analyses the manuscript of the encyclopaedia and the style of the translation. lt offers the entire text of the >Buch von Naturen der Ding< as a critical edition on more than 500 pages, 220 of which appear in print. The complete encyclopaedia is available on the JYX network.Jo antiikin ajoista ovat oppineet tehneet tietosanakirjoja kuvatakseen maailmantuntemustaan. Yhden kattavimmista tämän alan teoksista kirjoitti Isidor von Sevilla 600-luvulla. Eri tieteenalojen mm. lääketieteen ja filosofian kehittyessä laadittiin myös uusia tietosanakirjoja eri tarkoituksiin: esim. uskonnollisiin tarpeisiin (Hrabanus Maurusin >De rerum naturis<) tai käsikirjaksi oppineille (>Apex physicae<, tekijä anonyymi). Monet yliopistokirjastot hankkivat Bartholomäus Anglicusin teoksen >Liber de proprietatibus<, joka käännettiin usealle vieraalle kielelle mm. englanniksi ja hollanniksi. Myös Thomas von Chantimprén 1200-luvulla kirjoittama >Liber de natura rerum< käännettiin viiden saksalaisen toimesta. Yksi heistä oli Peter Königschlacher, joka eli 1400-luvulla eteläsaksalaisessa Saulgaun kaupungissa. Opettajana ja notaarina hän hallitsi hyvin latinan kielen. Koska aatelisherra Georg von Waldburg halusi myös itse omistaa tietosanakirjan, sai Königschlacher tehtäväkseen kääntää Thomasin teoksen saksan kielelle. Tämä tutkimus paljastaa, mitä latinankielisiä lähteitä Königschlacherilla oli käytettävänään. Se sisältää käsikirjoituksen tarkan kuvauksen ja valottaa kääntämistapaa. Varhaisuusyläsaksalaisen tekstin kriittinen editio kattaa noin 500 sivua ja muodostaakin valtaosan tästä tutkimuksesta. Resurssien säästämiseksi julkaistaan työstä vain noin 220 sivua painettuna. Koko tietosanakirja on saatavilla JYX-verkossa.unknown accessibilityei tietoa saavutettavuudest
Closeness and Disjuncture:On Friendship in the Field
Peter Berger is discussing the ambiguities of “friendship” in the ethnographic field. On the one hand, it is argued, making friends is a necessary corollary of the ethnographic quest of understanding through difference and is especially so in the initial situation many ethnographers find themselves in. Hence, relationships of closeness develop that entail many different components, for example mutual learning, commensality and conviviality, shared experiences and emotions during significant events and the establishment of trust. On the other hand, it is again the nature of the ethnographic situation — as encountered and described by this author — and the locations of the researcher in relation to her or his hosts that lead to disjunctions. Asymmetry, muteness and different temporalities are discussed in this regard. Friendship is thus a crucial, but also a highly ambivalent, volatile and problematic aspect of ethnographic fieldwork. Moreover, as a cultural category friendship cannot be taken for granted but has to be understood in a comparative perspective
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