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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_9949606368502882
    Format: 1 online resource (XIV, 458 pages)
    ISBN: 3-11-075512-2
    Series Statement: The Mouton-NINJAL Library of Linguistics [MNLL] , 7
    Content: Polarity (positive, negative) is one of the most fundamental concepts in the system of language and there are many expressions that are sensitive to polarity. For example, any in English and wh-mo in Japanese appear in negative contexts, but not in positive contexts. While previous studies have shown that polarity-sensitive expressions are a general phenomenon in languages, it has also become clear that there are variations in polarity-sensitive expressions. This volume explores the variations in polarity-sensitive expressions through comparisons between Japanese and other languages, such as English, German, Spanish, and Old Japanese, and examines the environments and contexts in which polarity-sensitive expressions occur, as well as the types of (cross-linguistic) variation allowed. The value of the present volume lies in its inclusion of research papers inquiring into various types of polarity-sensitive expressions, such as negative-, positive-, and discourse-sensitive polarity items as well as their variations. The research indicates new directions for the study of polarity-sensitive expressions in the fields of syntax, semantics, pragmatics, historical linguistics, corpus linguistics and psycholinguistics.
    Note: Frontmatter -- , Series preface -- , Preface -- , Contents -- , Contributors -- , Introduction -- , Chapter 1 Empirical and theoretical issues of polarity-sensitive expressions -- , Part I: Syntax of negative polarity items -- , Chapter 2 Negative polarity and clause structure in Japanese -- , Chapter 3 Negation-sensitive elements outside the Neg-domain -- , Part II: Syntax/semantics of polarity-sensitive expressions -- , Chapter 4 Degree quantification, minimum quantity predicates, and polarity in Japanese -- , Chapter 5 Polarity sensitivity of existential sentences with numerals in Japanese -- , Chapter 6 Polarity sensitivity and equative markers in Japanese and German -- , Part III: Positive polarity items -- , Chapter 7 On the rescuing of positive polarity items in Japanese and English: A hybrid approach -- , Chapter 8 Cross-linguistic variation in the scope of disjunction: Positive polarity, or anti-reconstruction? -- , Part IV: Discourse/pragmatic properties of polarity-sensitive items -- , Chapter 9 The forms and meanings of negative polar interrogatives in English and Japanese: Epistemic bias, information structure, prosody, and further issues -- , Chapter 10 The polarity sensitivity of reactive intensifiers in Japanese and English -- , Chapter 11 On propositional anaphora: 'Referential' propositions and propositional proforms -- , Chapter 12 Two types of attenuation strategies for polarity-sensitive items: The semantics of degree adverbs amari and sonnani in Japanese -- , Part V: Historical study of polarity-sensitive items -- , Chapter 13 Scope ambiguity and the loss of NPI feature: Evidence from the history of Japanese scalar particle dani -- , Index , Issued also in print. , In English.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110754995
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Singapore :Springer,
    UID:
    almahu_9949568772902882
    Format: 1 online resource (128 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789819934751
    Series Statement: SpringerBriefs in Education Series
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Ricœur, Concerns and Objectives -- 1.2 Economic Inequality and the Modern University: 1968 and Today -- 1.3 Understanding the Other -- 1.4 Populism's Binaries and Ricœur -- 1.5 Free Speech and 'Populism's Pincer Grip' -- 1.6 Structure of This Book -- References -- 2 The Idea of the University -- 2.1 The University as Marketplace -- 2.2 Ricœur's Idea of the University -- 2.3 Discrimination on Campus -- 2.4 Discrimination Against Colour -- 2.5 The Culture Wars and Wokeness -- 2.6 Endless Distraction and Inaction -- 2.7 Wael Hallaq -- 2.8 Secularism and Islam -- References -- 3 Communities of Inquiry -- 3.1 Communicating and Acting -- 3.2 Challenging the Curriculum on Discrimination -- 3.3 Communities of Inquiry -- 3.4 Key Guidelines for Communities of Inquiry -- 3.5 Practical Outcomes -- 3.6 Group Work -- 3.7 Rhetoric: Plato's Gorgias Dialogue -- 3.8 Communities of Inquiry Sample: Challenging Callicles -- References -- 4 Ricœur's Early Language, Activism and Algeria -- 4.1 Colonialism's Legacy in the Muslim World -- 4.2 Young Ricœur and Colonial Influence -- 4.3 Ricœur's Philosophical Toolkit -- 4.4 Algeria and Empire -- 4.5 Ricœur Versus Sartre: L'insoumission (Insubordination) -- 4.6 Methodological Dialectics and Hermeneutics -- 4.7 Linguistic Analysis and Structuralism as Method -- 4.8 Activism Beyond Negation -- 4.9 Communities of Inquiry Sample: Discussing Decolonisation -- References -- 5 1968 and Campus Shock at Nanterre -- 5.1 What Happened in 1968? -- 5.2 Ricœur's Commentaries on the University Crisis: 1968 and Beyond -- 5.3 Hermeneutics of Suspicion -- 5.4 The Changes Ricœur Wanted-Then and Now -- 5.5 Negation and the Feminist Cause -- 5.6 Ricœur Disappointed -- References -- 6 Challenging 'Bad Infinity' -- 6.1 Negative Cultural Imaginings -- 6.2 Whiteness. , 6.3 Jim Crow -- 6.4 The Denied Negative Debt at the Heart of Authoritarian Populism -- 6.5 'Bad Infinity' and the Unhappy Consciousness -- 6.6 Racism and Critical Race Theory (CRT) -- 6.7 Racism: Can Ricœur Help? -- 6.8 Communities of Inquiry Sample: Are Universities Perpetuating Institutional Racism? -- References -- 7 The Politics of Pedagogy Leading to Polity Praxis -- 7.1 Transcending Binaries and Whiteness-An Outline -- 7.2 The Fate of Activism? -- 7.3 Factors Militating Against Communities of Inquiry -- 7.4 Ricœurian Justice and Current UK Politics -- 7.5 Pragmatist Probabilities -- 7.6 Rhetorical Pragmatism -- 7.7 Religion on Campus: The Politics of Pedagogy -- 7.8 Polity Praxis: German Case Study on Religious Thinking -- 7.9 The Politics of Pedagogy: Influencing the Corridors of Power -- 7.10 Polity Praxis: An All-Party Parliamentary Group -- References -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Scott-Baumann, Alison Paul Ricoeur Singapore : Springer,c2023 ISBN 9789819934744
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam/Philadelphia :John Benjamins Publishing Company,
    UID:
    almahu_9949615170202882
    Format: 1 online resource (360 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 90-272-4933-4
    Series Statement: Studies in Language Companion Series ; v.234
    Content: "Recent years have seen a growing interest in grammatical variation, a core explanandum of grammatical theory. The present volume explores questions that are fundamental to this line of research: First, the question of whether variation can always and completely be explained by intra- or extra-linguistic predictors, or whether there is a certain amount of unpredictable - or 'free' - grammatical variation. Second, the question of what implications the (in-)existence of free variation would hold for our theoretical models and the empirical study of grammar. The volume provides the first dedicated book-length treatment of this long-standing topic. Following an introductory chapter by the editors, it contains ten case studies on potentially free variation in morphology and syntax drawn from Germanic, Romance, Uralic and Maya"--
    Note: Intro -- Free Variation in Grammar -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- Chapter 1 Free variation, unexplained variation? -- On the history of 'free variation' -- Free variation -- Investigating free variation -- This volume -- Identifying and measuring free variation -- Free variation and language change -- Free variation? Look harder! -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Section 1 Identifying and measuring free variation -- Chapter 2 How free is the position of German object pronouns? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. What governs the position of object pronouns? -- 3. Experiments 1-3 -- 3.1 Experiment 1 -- 3.1.1 Method -- Participants -- Materials -- Procedure -- Scoring -- 3.1.2 Results -- 3.1.3 Discussion -- 3.2 Experiment 2 -- 3.2.1 Method -- Participants -- Materials -- Procedure -- 3.2.2 Results -- 3.2.3 Discussion -- 3.3 Experiment 3 -- 3.3.1 Method -- Participants -- Materials -- Procedure -- 3.3.2 Results -- 3.3.3 Discussion -- 4. General discussion -- References -- Chapter 3 Optionality in the syntax of Germanic traditional dialects -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Non-true optionality (Level 2) -- 2.1 Apparent optionality -- 2.2 Evidence of apparent optionality -- 2.3 Interim summary -- 2.4 False optionality -- 2.5 Evidence of false optionality -- 2.6 Discussion and interim summary -- 3. True optionality -- 3.1 Evidence of true optionality -- 3.2 The simple negation/negative spread alternation from a diachronic perspective -- 4. Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Chapter 4 Non-verbal plural number agreement. Between the distributive plural and singular -- 1. Introduction, structure and relevance of the chapter -- 1.1 Distributive plural in the literature -- 1.2 The distributive plural - the general norm and blocking factors -- 1.2.1 Avoidance of ambiguity -- 1.2.2 Fossilisation/the force of invariability. , 1.2.3 Singularisation to achieve generalisation -- 1.2.4 Countability-related factor(s) -- 1.2.5 The wish to indicate joint possession -- 1.2.6 The wish to convey ideas of a figurative, abstract or universal kind -- 1.2.7 Do blocking factors always block? -- 1.2.8 Classification of blocking factors according to their strength -- 2. Free variation -- 3. The distributive plural and singular displayed by selected expressions in English corpora -- 3.1 Methodology -- 3.2 Results -- 3.2.1 Results -- 3.2.2 Results -- 3.3 Comparison of the datasets -- 4. Genre and free variation -- 5. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Language corpora & -- dictionaries -- Software -- Chapter 5 'Optional' direct objects: Free variation? -- 1. Human behaviour, flying saucers and the afterlife, or -- 2. Modelling variation -- 2.1 Rules for allophones in free and complementary distribution -- 2.2 Polysemy, polymorphy and partially equivalent distribution -- 3. Valency, constructions and optional complements -- 3.1 Verbs between polysemy and polymorphy -- 3.2 Optional direct objects -- 3.2.1 'Topic drop' -- 3.2.2 'Lexical ellipses' -- 3.2.3 'DNI' vs 'INI' -- 3.2.4 Non-lexical DNI -- 4. Empirical study -- 4.1 Methods -- 4.2 Do activity templates license valency reductions? -- 4.2.1 Setting -- 4.2.2 Results -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Appendix A. Cover sheet of questionnaire no. 35, incl. translations and comments -- Appendix B. Results -- Section 2 Free variation and language change -- Chapter 6 Variation and change in the Aanaar Saami conditional perfect -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 The Saami conditional and its perfect -- 1.2 Data and methods of the present study -- 2. The Aanaar Saami conditional perfect and its variation across the data -- 3. Possible determinants of the variation -- 3.1 Person and number -- 3.2 Main verb. , 3.3 Type of clause -- 3.4 Polarity -- 3.5 Dialect -- 3.6 Speaker generation -- 3.7 Significance and interplay of the variables -- 4. Discussion -- 5. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- References -- Sources of data and examples -- Chapter 7 Stability of inflectional variation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Varying forms -- 2.1 Morphological variation -- 2.2 Overabundance -- 2.3 Free morphological variation -- 2.4 Excursus - phonological variation -- 3. Phenomenon -- 3.1 The Swiss German indefinite article -- 3.2 dat.masc/neutr of the indefinite article in Zurich German -- 3.3 Zurich German -- 4. Corpus study -- 4.1 Data and data collection -- 4.2 Data analysis and results -- 4.2.1 Findings in the historical corpus -- 4.2.2 Findings in the modern corpus -- 4.2.3 Intrapersonal variation -- 5. Emergence of emene and of overabundance -- 6. Results -- 7. Summary -- Bibliography -- Chapter 8 Resemanticising 'free' variation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Development of the V1 conditional in West Germanic -- 3. Methods -- 3.1 Coding and behaviour properties of conditional clauses -- 3.2 Corpus -- 3.3 Operationalisation -- 3.4 Model building -- 4. Results -- 4.1 Semantic and syntactic effects -- 4.2 Lexical effects -- 5. Discussion and conclusion -- Funding -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Appendix -- Section 3 Free variation? Look harder! -- Chapter 9 Syntactic priming and individual preferences -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Persistence and individual variation -- 3. The case study -- 3.1 Data -- 3.2 Persistence as a predictor of the variation between -ra and -se -- 3.3 Modelling the influence of individual preferences -- 3.4 Discussion of results -- 4. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Chapter 10 Optionality, variation and categorial properties -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Plural marking in Yucatec -- 3. Variation unexplained. , 3.1 Morphosyntactic analysis of the Yucatec plural marker -- 3.2 Interpretation of the plural morpheme -- 3.2.1 Degree of animacy -- 3.2.2 Argument structure -- 3.2.3 Numerical quantification -- 3.3 Not a case of free variation -- 4. The condition of the variation -- 4.1 Individuation and (pseudo-)partitivity -- 4.2 Analysis -- 4.3 Compositionality -- 4.3.1 Pluralised nouns -- 4.3.2 Numeral-classifiers with bare nouns -- 4.3.3 Numeral classifiers with pluralised nouns -- 5. Further discussion -- 6. Conclusion -- Funding -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- References -- Chapter 11 Variation of deontic constructions in spoken Catalan -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Free variation in language -- 3. Deontic verbal constructions in Catalan -- 3.1 Catalan deontic constructions and linguistic factors -- 3.2 Sociolinguistic factors and variation in Catalan -- 4. Methodology -- 5. Results -- 6. Discussion of results and possible future lines of research -- 7. Can variationist linguistics prove the (non)existence of free variation? -- 8. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-1428-X
    Language: English
    Keywords: Essays. ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Essays. ; Electronic books. ; Essays. ; Electronic books.
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602164202882
    Format: 1 online resource (192 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783319785035
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Objectives -- Organisation of Book Chapters -- Intended Readers -- Limitations -- Book Project During Sabbatical Stay in Sydney -- Aims -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Early Work and Review Articles -- 2 The History of the Patient Record and the Paper Record -- 2.1 The Egyptians and the Greeks -- 2.2 The Arabs -- 2.3 The Swedes -- 2.4 The Paper Based Patient Record -- 2.5 Greek and Latin Used in the Patient Record -- 2.6 Summary of the History of the Patient Record and the Paper Record -- 3 User Needs: Clinicians, Clinical Researchers and Hospital Management -- 3.1 Reading and Retrieving Efficiency of Patient Records -- 3.2 Natural Language Processing on Clinical Text -- 3.3 Electronic Patient Record System -- 3.4 Different User Groups -- 3.5 Summary -- 4 Characteristics of Patient Records and Clinical Corpora -- 4.1 Patient Records -- 4.2 Pathology Reports -- 4.3 Spelling Errors in Clinical Text -- 4.4 Abbreviations -- 4.5 Acronyms -- 4.6 Assertions -- 4.6.1 Negations -- 4.6.2 Speculation and Factuality -- Levels of Certainty -- Negation and Speculations in Other Languages, Such as Chinese -- 4.7 Clinical Corpora Available -- 4.7.1 English Clinical Corpora Available -- 4.7.2 Swedish Clinical Corpora -- 4.7.3 Clinical Corpora in Other Languages than Swedish -- 4.8 Summary -- 5 Medical Classifications and Terminologies -- 5.1 International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD) -- 5.1.1 International Classification of Diseases for Oncology (ICD-O-3) -- 5.2 Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine: Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) -- 5.3 Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) -- 5.4 Unified Medical Language Systems (UMLS) -- 5.5 Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification (ATC) -- 5.6 Different Standards for Interoperability -- 5.6.1 Health Level 7 (HL7). , Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) -- 5.6.2 OpenEHR -- 5.6.3 Mapping and Expanding Terminologies -- 5.7 Summary of Medical Classifications and Terminologies -- 6 Evaluation Metrics and Evaluation -- 6.1 Qualitative and Quantitative Evaluation -- 6.2 The Cranfield Paradigm -- 6.3 Metrics -- 6.4 Annotation -- 6.5 Inter-Annotator Agreement (IAA) -- 6.6 Confidence and Statistical Significance Testing -- 6.7 Annotation Tools -- 6.8 Gold Standard -- 6.9 Summary of Evaluation Metrics and Annotation -- 7 Basic Building Blocks for Clinical Text Processing -- 7.1 Definitions -- 7.2 Segmentation and Tokenisation -- 7.3 Morphological Processing -- 7.3.1 Lemmatisation -- 7.3.2 Stemming -- 7.3.3 Compound Splitting (Decompounding) -- 7.3.4 Abbreviation Detection and Expansion -- A Machine Learning Approach for Abbreviation Detection -- 7.3.5 Spell Checking and Spelling Error Correction -- Spell Checking of Clinical Text -- Open Source Spell Checkers -- Search Engines and Spell Checking -- 7.3.6 Part-of-Speech Tagging (POS Tagging) -- 7.4 Syntactical Analysis -- 7.4.1 Shallow Parsing (Chunking) -- 7.4.2 Grammar Tools -- 7.5 Semantic Analysis and Concept Extraction -- 7.5.1 Named Entity Recognition -- Machine Learning for Named Entity Recognition -- 7.5.2 Negation Detection -- Negation Detection Systems -- Negation Trigger Lists -- NegEx for Swedish -- NegEx for French, Spanish and German -- Machine Learning Approaches for Negation Detection -- 7.5.3 Factuality Detection -- 7.5.4 Relative Processing (Family History) -- 7.5.5 Temporal Processing -- TimeML and TIMEX3 -- HeidelTime -- i2b2 Temporal Relations Challenge -- Temporal Processing for Swedish Clinical Text -- Temporal Processing for French Clinical Text -- Temporal Processing for Portuguese Clinical Text -- 7.5.6 Relation Extraction -- 2010 i2b2/VA Challenge Relation Classification Task. , Other Approaches for Relation Extraction -- 7.5.7 Anaphora Resolution -- i2b2 Challenge in Coreference Resolution for Electronic Medical Records -- 7.6 Summary of Basic Building Blocks for Clinical Text Processing -- 8 Computational Methods for Text Analysis and Text Classification -- 8.1 Rule-Based Methods -- 8.1.1 Regular Expressions -- 8.2 Machine Learning-Based Methods -- 8.2.1 Features and Feature Selection -- Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency, tf-idf -- Vector Space Model -- 8.2.2 Active Learning -- 8.2.3 Pre-Annotation with Revision or Machine Assisted Annotation -- 8.2.4 Clustering -- 8.2.5 Topic Modelling -- 8.2.6 Distributional Semantics -- 8.2.7 Association Rules -- 8.3 Explaining and Understanding the Results Produced -- 8.4 Computational Linguistic Modules for Clinical Text Processing -- 8.5 NLP Tools: UIMA, GATE, NLTK etc -- 8.6 Summary of Computational Methods for Text Analysis and Text Classification -- 9 Ethics and Privacy of Patient Records for Clinical Text Mining Research -- 9.1 Ethical Permission -- 9.2 Social Security Number -- 9.3 Safe Storage -- 9.4 Automatic De-Identification of Patient Records -- 9.4.1 Density of PHI in Electronic Patient Record Text -- 9.4.2 Pseudonymisation of Electronic Patient Records -- 9.4.3 Re-Identification and Privacy -- Black Box Approach -- 9.5 Summary of Ethics and Privacy of Patient Records for Clinical Text Mining Research -- 10 Applications of Clinical Text Mining -- 10.1 Detection and Prediction of Healthcare Associated Infections (HAIs) -- 10.1.1 Healthcare Associated Infections (HAIs) -- 10.1.2 Detecting and Predicting HAI -- 10.1.3 Commercial HAI Surveillance Systems and Systems in Practical Use -- 10.2 Detection of Adverse Drug Events (ADEs) -- 10.2.1 Adverse Drug Events (ADEs) -- 10.2.2 Resources for Adverse Drug Event Detection -- 10.2.3 Passive Surveillance of ADEs. , 10.2.4 Active Surveillance of ADEs -- 10.2.5 Approaches for ADE Detection -- An Approach for Swedish Clinical Text -- An Approach for Spanish Clinical Text -- A Joint Approach for Spanish and Swedish Clinical Text -- 10.3 Suicide Prevention by Mining Electronic Patient Records -- 10.4 Mining Pathology Reports for Diagnostic Tests -- 10.4.1 The Case of the Cancer Registry of Norway -- 10.4.2 The Medical Text Extraction (Medtex) System -- 10.5 Mining for Cancer Symptoms -- 10.6 Text Summarisation and Translation of Patient Record -- 10.6.1 Summarising the Patient Record -- 10.6.2 Other Approaches in Summarising the Patient Record -- 10.6.3 Summarising Medical Scientific Text -- 10.6.4 Simplification of the Patient Record for Laypeople -- 10.7 ICD-10 Diagnosis Code Assignment and Validation -- 10.7.1 Natural Language Generation from SNOMED CT -- 10.8 Search Cohort Selection and Similar Patient Cases -- 10.8.1 Comorbidities -- 10.8.2 Information Retrieval from Electronic Patient Records -- 10.8.3 Search Engine Solr -- 10.8.4 Supporting the Clinician in an Emergency Department with the Radiology Report -- 10.8.5 Incident Reporting -- 10.8.6 Hypothesis Generation -- 10.8.7 Practical Use of SNOMED CT -- 10.8.8 ICD-10 and SNOMED CT Code Mapping -- 10.8.9 Analysing the Patient's Speech -- 10.8.10 MYCIN and Clinical Decision Support -- 10.8.11 IBM Watson Health -- 10.9 Summary of Applications of Clinical Text Mining -- 11 Networks and Shared Tasks in Clinical Text Mining -- 11.1 Conferences, Workshops and Journals -- 11.2 Summary of Networks and Shared Tasks in Clinical Text Mining -- 12 Conclusions and Outlook -- 12.1 Outcomes -- References -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Dalianis, Hercules Clinical Text Mining Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2018 ISBN 9783319785028
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books
    URL: Image  (Thumbnail cover image)
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    URL: OAPEN  (Creative Commons License)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    De Gruyter | Berlin ; : De Gruyter,
    UID:
    almahu_9948052366102882
    Format: 1 online resource (707 p.)
    ISBN: 3-11-062252-1
    Series Statement: Jahrbuch des Instituts für Deutsche Sprache ; 1995
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Frontmatter -- , INHALT -- , Eröffnung der Jahrestagung 1995 / , Einstiege und Zugänge -- , Das Deutsche im typologischen Spektrum. Einführung in den Band / , Sprache und Sprachen: Universalien und Typologie / , Kontrastive Grammatik und Typologie / , V2 und Satzklammer und ihre Folgen für die übrige Grammatik -- , Dependenz und Serialisierung: das Deutsche im Sprachvergleich / , Germanic Verb Second Languages / , "Deutsch ist eine V/2-Sprache mit Verbendstellung und freier Wortfolge." / , V2-Effekte: Wortstellungen und Ellipsen / , Negation auf Wanderschaft -- , Negationsverstärkung und Jespersens Zyklus im Deutschen und in anderen europäischen Sprachen / , Negationssyntax in der deutschen Sprachgeschichte: Grammatikalisierung oder Degrammatikalisierung? / , Negation in Interrogation und Exklamation / , Typenbestimmung in lexikalischen Feldern -- , Verbbedeutung und Verbgrammatik: Transportverben im Deutschen / , Partikelverben im deutsch-englischen Vergleich / , Das Präpositioneninventar als Determinante des Verstehens von Raumpräpositionen: vor und hinter in fünf Sprachen / , Lexikalisierung und Wortfeldstruktur - typologisch betrachtet / , Grammatikalisierung und "Mischtyp" -- , Das Tempussystem des Deutschen im typologischen Vergleich / , Überlegungen zum Deutschen als sprachtypologischem "Mischtyp" / , Das Verb in seinem Umfeld / , Pronomina: stark, schwach oder klitisch -- , Germanische und romanische Pronomina: stark - schwach - klitisch / , Personalpronomina, Klitiktypologie und die Struktur des 'Mittelfeldes' / , Morphologische Variation -- , Prinzipien für die Genuszuweisung im Deutschen / , Morphologischer Strukturwande / , Fugenelemente / , Phonologie und Graphie -- , Silben- und Morphemstruktur in der Phonologie des Deutschen / , Zur Typologie phonologischer Domänen / , Der Zusammenhang von Akzentuierung und Phrasierung im Sprachvergleich / , Zur Typologie der Alphabetschriften: Das Deutsche und die Reform seiner Orthographie / , Anschriften der Autoren -- , Das Institut für deutsche Sprache im Jahre 1995 -- , Anhang -- , Backmatter , Issued also in print. , In German.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-11-014983-4
    Language: German
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Konferenzschrift
    URL: Cover
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Hoboken, NJ :John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
    UID:
    almafu_9960705169302883
    Format: 1 online resource.
    ISBN: 9781119071754 , 1119071755 , 9781119072072 , 1119072077 , 1119072085 , 9781119072089
    Series Statement: Blackwell companions to the ancient world ; 126
    Content: "The historiography on Ancient North Africa is massive and still predominantly in French, though scholarship and archaeological research published in Italian, Spanish, English, German, and Arabic has increased notably since the 1970s. The main challenge facing those who wish to work in the field comes from the association of its historiography with French and Italian colonialism and its legacy. Having conquered and annexed Algeria in the mid-nineteenth century, the French authorities were deeply concerned with the long-term success of their colonial mission, which they saw as continuing in the footsteps of Rome in Africa. One avenue to this end was considerable investment in the discovery and analysis of the process-dubbed Romanisation--by which the Roman state was believed to have imposed its imperial culture and civilization on the polities, peoples, and landscape of the region. The history and archaeology of North Africa had seemingly much to lend to this program: among others a legacy not dissimilar to that of Roman Gaul and the importance of its Christian past through the great African fathers of the Church, Cyprian and Augustine. There was likewise an implicit concern, very much suited to the age of European imperialism and empire in the Middle East and North Africa, for succeeding where the Romans had obviously failed with the Arab conquest of the seventh century AD. This was especially important in Algeria. Napoleon III wanted an "Arab Kingdom" in his empire but following his defeat in the Franco-Prussian War and the advent of the French Republic Algeria became a French department. Henceforward the Arab identity of Algeria was to be denied and the Roman past was to be deployed to justify the negation of Algeria's history after the Arab conquest. The impact of this is still evident in the ambivalence felt by contemporary Algerian scholars and archaeologists of Antiquity towards the Roman period in North Africa. The establishment of the French protectorates in Tunisia (1881) and Morocco (1912), on the other hand, did not negate the official personality of either country, where the Bey of Tunis and the King of Morocco, a descendent of the prophet, remained in power. The Tunisians absorbed the Numidian, Carthaginian and Roman past, as did the Moroccans. Italy's entry into Libya (1911) were founded on the same premises. Italy's entry into Libya (1911) can be traced back to the Congress of Berlin in 1878 when Italy sought imperial possessions in North Africa alongside Britain and France. Italy's power in Libya remained tenuous until the execution of the rebel Omar Mukhtar 1931, after which the country was fully integrated into Italy as its "fourth shore." Libya's Roman past became central to the maintenance of Italian colonial power in the process"--
    Note: Part I. Setting the stage -- Part II. Africa in the first millennium BC -- Part III. The Roman period (146 BC -- AD 439) -- Part IV. From the Vandal kingdom to the Arab conquest (AD 439 -- AD 711)
    Additional Edition: Print version: Companion to North Africa in antiquity Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2022 ISBN 9781444350012
    Language: English
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; History. ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books. ; History. ; Aufsatzsammlung ; History ; Aufsatzsammlung ; History ; Electronic books. ; History.
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  • 7
    UID:
    almafu_9958999177302883
    Format: 1 online resource
    ISBN: 9783839445648
    Series Statement: Edition transcript ; 2
    Content: Was kann Freiheit heute heißen? Ein soziologischer Blick auf Freiheit kann diese Frage nur vor dem Hintergrund der beiden fundamentalen Transformationen erörtern, denen sich gegenwärtige Gesellschaften ausgesetzt sehen: die Prozesse der Globalisierung und der Digitalisierung. Neue Begrenzungen von Freiheit durch Globalisierung und neue Entgrenzungen von Freiheit durch Digitalisierung setzen ambivalente und paradoxe Dynamiken in Gang, die zugleich eine Gefährdung der Demokratie darstellen. Nur eine Demokratie jedoch, die auch institutionell lernfähig ist und diese Lernfähigkeit zur Resilienz ausbaut, hat Chancen, politische Freiheit und damit auch die Freiheit des Individuums zu bewahren.Nicht weniger als die Zukunft der Freiheit hängt davon ab, dass eine Konzeption von Freiheit entwickelt wird, welche die gesellschaftlichen Umbrüche des 21. Jahrhunderts reflektiert und daraus die Aufforderung zum Widerstand gegen neue Tendenzen der Negation von Freiheit folgert.
    Content: Whan can freedom mean today? A sociological view at freedom can explore this question only against the background of the two fundamental transformations societies are facing currently: the processes of globalization and digitization. New limits to freedom by globalization and new delimitations of freedom by digitization activate ambivalent and paradox dynamics that at the same time are a danger to democracy. Only a democracy, however, that is also capable of learning institutionally and that expands this learning ability into resilience stand a change to preserve political freedom and therefore the freedom of individuals as well. No less than the future of freedom depends on the development of a conception of freedom that reflects the social transformations of the 21(st) Century and the invitation to withstand new tendencies to negate freedom.
    Note: Frontmatter -- , Inhalt -- , 1. Einleitung -- , 2. Globalisierung als Begrenzung von Freiheit -- , 3. Digitalisierung als Entgrenzung von Freiheit -- , Exkurs: Digitale Freiheit als Kontingenzkontrolle -- , 4. Eine neue Grammatik der Freiheit -- , 5. Komplexitätsmanagement als Dispositiv der Freiheit -- , 6. Zur Tiefenstruktur komplexer Freiheit -- , Exkurs: Freiheit in System und Lebenswelt -- , 7. Freiheit in Zeiten der Konfusion -- , 8. Ausblick -- , Bibliographie , In German.
    Language: German
    Subjects: Political Science , Sociology
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam :Rodopi,
    UID:
    almafu_9959242926202883
    Format: 1 online resource (191 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 94-012-0437-3 , 1-4356-0249-8
    Series Statement: Thamyris intersecting ; no. 15
    Content: Alterity is not a mere synonym of difference; what it signifies is otherness, a distinction or separation that can entail similarity as well as difference. The articles collected here explore ways to define, situate and negotiate alterity in a manner that does not do away with the other through negation or neutralization but that instead engages alterity as a reconfiguring of identities that keeps them open to change, to a becoming without horizon. Alterity and its situated negotiations with identity are configured through the body, through the psyche and through translational politics. From critical readings of angels, specters, grotesque bodies, online avatars, Sex and the City , pornography in French literature, Australian billboard art, Pina Bausch, Adrian Piper, Kashmiri poetry, contemporary German fiction, Jacques Brault and Northern-Irish poetry, there emerges a vision of identities as multi-faceted constructions that are continually being transformed by the various alterities with which they intersect and which they must actively engage in order to function effectively in the social, political, and aesthetic realm.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Preliminary material / , Introduction: The Shock of the Other / , The Impossibly Intersubjective and the Logic of the Both / , What Was Postmodernism? or, The Last of the Angels / , The Grotesque Body: Fleshing Out the Subject / , Auto-Identities: Avatar Identities in the Digital Age / , Vocal Alterities: Voice-Over, Voice-Off and the Cultural Addressee / , Eros and Extimité: Viewing the Pornographic Self in Bataille, Cixous and Houellebecq / , Choreography and Trauma in Pina Bausch’s Bluebeard – While Listening to a Taped Recording of Béla Bartók’s “Bluebeard’s Castle” / , Art That Matters: Identity Politics and the Event of Viewing / , Shame in Alterities: Adrian Piper, Intersubjectivity, and the Racial Formation of Identity / , A Language of One’s Own?: Linguistic Under-Representation in the Kashmir Valley / , Transgenerational Mediations of Identity in Rachel Seiffert’s The Dark Room and Marcel Beyer’s Spies / , The Braultian Path to the Other: Estrangement and Nontranslation / , Mapping Cultural Space in Contemporary Northern Irish Poetry / , List of Figures / , Contributors / , Index / , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-420-2199-3
    Language: English
    Subjects: Comparative Studies. Non-European Languages/Literatures , Philosophy
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: DOI
    URL: DOI:
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  • 9
    Book
    Book
    Berlin [u.a.] : de Gruyter
    UID:
    gbv_729766691
    Format: VII, 188 S. , graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9783110302141 , 3110302144
    Series Statement: Linguistische Arbeiten 549
    Note: Literaturverz. S. [177] - 182 , Teilw. zugl.: Philadelphia, Univ. of Pennsylvania, Diss., 2008 u.d.T.: Scheffler, Tatjana: Semantic operators in different dimensions , Two-dimensional semantics.Conventional implicature ;Conventional implicatures vs. presuppositions;A discourse logicSentence adverbs.Types of sentence adverbs ;Semantic unembeddability;Antecedent of conditionals;Questions;Negation;Denial;Attitude verbs;Semantic (un)embeddability of sentence adverbs ;Properties of german sentence adverbs;The probably type;The unfortunately type;The frankly type;Frankly speaking;Properties of three types of sentence adverbs ;Sentence adverbs on two semantic dimensions ;Syntax/semantics mismatch;An anaphoric approach to utterance modification ;SummaryDenn and weil : causal connectives in two dimensions.Data;Two german words for 'Because';Epistemic and speech act uses;Three exceptions to the use of denn ;Previous work;The performative analysis;Denn and antibackgrounding ;Semantics of denn;Denn as a conventional implicature item;Unembeddability of denn;Formalizing denn's semantics ;Syntax of denn ;The distribution of denn vs. weil explained;Denn in epistemic and speech act causal sentences;Three exceptions to the use of denn ;Further issues;Epistemic and speech act uses of weil;English because;Embedding under non-restrictive relative clauses ;SummaryRelevance conditionals : if on another dimension.Crucial properties of relevance conditionals;Semantic unembeddability;Illocutionary status of the consequent;Syntactic unintegration ;The analysis : 'If' on two dimensions;Proposal;Net effect of the if-clause in RCs;Discussion ;Previous accounts;Conditional assertion accounts;Existential quantification over potential literal acts;Relevance conditionals as topics ;SummaryA paradigm of adjuncts on two dimensions.Taking stock;Syntactic unintegration;Argument types of CI modifiers ;Although ;Modifiers on different dimensionsComplement clauses.Attitude verbs and their complements;V2 embedding;Slifting;Properties of slifting vs. V2 embedding ;Verbs that allow slifting and V2 complements;Which verbs allow V2 complements?;Which verbs do not allow V2 complements?;Slifting verbs;Generalization : epistemicity ;Slifting as evidentials;Analysis;Slifting and verb classes;Slifting and semantic embedding;Summary : slifting ;V2 complement clauses;Analysis;V2 complement clause
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110302332
    Additional Edition: Online-Ausg. Scheffler, Tatjana, 1980 - Two-dimensional Semantics Berlin [u.a.] : De Gruyter, 2013 ISBN 9783110302332
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Scheffler, Tatjana, 1980 - Two-dimensional semantics Berlin : De Gruyter, 2013 ISBN 9783110302332
    Language: English
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Deutsch ; Kausalsatz ; Objektsatz ; Nebensatz ; Adjunkt ; Semantik ; Deutsch ; Semantik ; Kausalsatz ; Objektsatz ; Nebensatz ; Hochschulschrift ; Hochschulschrift
    Author information: Scheffler, Tatjana 1980-
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge, United Kingdom ; : Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9961161683302883
    Format: 1 online resource (xvii, 410 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-009-26609-8 , 1-009-26614-4 , 1-009-26613-6
    Content: The book of Esther is one of the most challenging books in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, not only because of the difficulty of understanding the book itself in its time, place, and literary contexts, but also for the long and tortuous history of interpretation it has generated in both Jewish and Christian traditions. In this volume, Isaac Kalimi addresses both issues. He situates 'traditional' literary, textual, theological, and historical-critical discussion of Esther alongside comparative Jewish and Christian interpretive histories, showing how the former serves the latter. Kalimi also demonstrates how the various interpretations of the Book of Esther have had an impact on its reception history, as well as on Jewish-Christian relations. Based on meticulous and comprehensive analysis of all available sources, Kalimi's volume fills a gap in biblical, Jewish, and Christian studies and also shows how and why the Book of Esther became one of the central books of Judaism and one of the most neglected books in Christianity.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 14 Jul 2023). , Cover -- Half-title page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Abbreviations -- 1 An Introduction -- I The Story of Esther -- II Esther, Jews, and Christians -- III Challenges and Purposes -- IV Sources and Approach -- V State of Research -- VI Outline -- Part I Esther: Story and History, Literary Features, and Theology -- 2 Esther's Story: Composition, Literary Unity, Textual Development, and Noble Characters -- I The Story of Esther -- II Place and Time of Composition -- III Structure and Literary Unity -- 1 Esther 9:20-28 - The First Purim Letter -- 2 Esther 9:29-32 - The Second Purim Letter -- 3 Esther 10:1-3 - The Closing Chapter of the Book -- IV Textual Development: The Hebrew and Greek Versions -- 1 B-Text, A-Text, and MT -- 2 The Six Major Greek Additions and the Colophon -- 3 Which Text Is Closest to the Urtext? -- 4 Provisional Summary -- V Noble Characters -- 1 Vashti: A Queen with Dignity and Self-Respect -- 2 Esther: Beauty, Courage, and Wisdom -- 3 Mordecai: "Seeking the Welfare of His People" -- A The Major Persona of the Book -- B A Courtier at the King's Gate -- C The Clash between Mordecai and Haman -- VI Conclusion -- 3 Virtuosity, Literary Style, and Features -- I Virtuosity -- II The Secular Feature of the Book -- III Repetitive Style and Other Literary Elements -- IV Mosaic Style -- V Synonyms and Series of Synonymous Words -- VI Inner Interpretations and Identifications -- VII Inclusio, Chiasmus, and Chiastic in Parallel -- 1 Inclusio and Chiasmus -- 2 Chiasmus in Parallel -- VIII Antithesis -- IX Structures of Reversal Destiny and Talionis -- X Overstatement, Hyperbole, and Typological Numbers -- XI Satirical and Humoristic Descriptions -- XII Conclusion -- 4 The Central Message of Esther within Biblical and Ancient Near East Contexts -- I The Fear of Complete Annihilation. , II Esther's Response to the Fear of Complete Annihilation -- III Theology without Mentioning Theos -- IV The Theological Message of Esther -- V Is the Presumed Theological Concept of Esther Innovative? -- VI Conclusion -- 5 Historical Setting and Historicity -- I The Historicity of the Esther Story -- 1 Esther as a Completely Reliable Story -- 2 Esther as a Completely Unreliable Story -- A The Esther Story and Purim Are Echoes of Ancient Myth -- B Esther as a Nonhistorical Story -- II Historical Setting and Historicity -- 1 The Empire -- A Borders and Provinces -- B מדינה , "satrapy," and dahyu -- C "One Hundred Twenty-Seven" -- 2 The Emperor: Ahasuerus/Xerxes -- 3 The Queen and Harem -- A The Queen: Vashti, Esther, and Amestris -- B The Harem -- 4 The Imperial Hierarchy -- 5 The Geographical Setting: Susa, Persepolis, and Their Palaces -- A Susa and Its Palace -- B Susa versus Persepolis -- 6 Achaemenid Royal Annals and Imperial Archives -- 7 The Royal Postal Delivery System -- 8 The Persian Legal System -- 9 Tolerance toward Others -- 10 Conspiracy and Murder in the Royal Court -- 11 Annihilation of the Imperial Jews -- III Conclusion: Esther as Novelistic History -- IV Appendix: Persia and Persians in the Hebrew Bible -- 6 Ancient Parallels to Haman's Accusations -- I Haman and His Accusations -- II The Opponents of Daniel -- 1 Daniel in the Lions' Den -- 2 Is Daniel's Story Shaped According to Esther's Story? -- III The Counselors of Antiochus VII Sidetes/Euergetes -- IV Apollonius Molon -- V Apion of Alexandria -- VI The Roman Governor Flaccus -- VII The Roman Historian Tacitus -- VIII The Greek Scholar Lucius Flavius Philostratus -- IX Conclusion -- Part II "Oh, How Much They Love the Book of Esther!" Esther among the Jews -- 7 Esther, Torah's Law, and the Dead Sea Scrolls' Community -- I Introduction. , II Why Is the Book of Esther Absent from the Dead Sea Scrolls? -- III Esther's Marriage to Ahasuerus -- IV Boaz's Marriage to Ruth the Moabitess -- V "Fast for Me" -- VI Conclusion -- 8 Esther in Jewish Canon, Tradition, Culture, and Thought -- I The Book's Name -- II The Place in the Canon -- III Esther through the Generations -- IV The Story of Esther and the Talmudic Rabbis -- 1 Fill in Gaps and Intertextual Allusions -- 2 Anachronism -- 3 Divine Interference -- 4 Theodicy -- A The Traumatic Experience of the Jews -- B The Case of Vashti -- V Esther and Mordecai -- 1 Esther -- 2 Mordecai -- VI Purim and the Remembrance of Amalek -- VII Haman, Agag, and Amalek -- VIII Reading of the Megillah -- IX The Story of Esther in Jewish Thought -- X The Esther Story in Art, Play, Music, and Film -- XI Some Other Jewish Voices -- 1 Claude G. Montefiore -- 2 Samuel Sandmel -- 3 Schalom Ben-Chorin -- 4 Jonathan D. Magonet -- 5 Overall Assessment -- XII Conclusion -- 9 Identification of Jew-Haters with Haman New "Hamans," "Purims," and "Megillot" -- I Creative Expounding of the Book of Esther -- 1 The Greek Esther: Haman as a Macedonian -- 2 Josephus' Rephrasing of Haman's Charges -- 3 Targum Sheni to Esther -- 4 Midrash Esther Rabbah -- 5 Saba's Commentary on Esther in Setting of Expulsions -- 6 Christians as Edom and Haman -- 7 Leopold Zunz and the German Kaiser Friedrich Wilhelm IV -- II Forming New "Purims" and "Megillot" -- 1 Purim Shmuel haNagid -- 2 Purim Narbonne -- 3 Purim Castile -- 4 Purim Saragossa -- 5 Megillat Mizrayim -- 6 Purim Mizrayim -- 7 "Second Purims" in Other Mediterranean Lands -- 8 Purim Frankfurt or the Vintz-Purim -- 9 Megillat ha'Atzmaut -- 10 Haman, Amalek, Purim, and the Muslim/Arab-Israeli Conflict -- III The Esther Story, Purim, and the Nazi Germans -- 1 "The Murder Feast" -- 2 "A Second Triumphant Purim". , 3 "We Read Haman the People Heard Hitler" -- 4 "Purim Hitler" of Casablanca and Other Holocaust Survivors -- IV Conclusion -- V Appendix: Esther's Theological Message versus Historical Reality -- 1 The Historical Reality -- 2 Theology, History, and Us: A Post-Shoah Reading of Esther -- Part III Divine or Demon? Esther among the Christians -- 10 Esther in the Christian Canon, Interpretation, Tradition, and Culture -- I The Christian "Book of Esther" versus the Jewish "Megillat Esther" -- II Anti-Jewish Trends in Esther's Greek Translations -- III Authority, Place, and Names of Esther in the Christian Canon -- IV Esther in Christian Interpretation, Tradition, and Culture -- 1 Quotation and Interpretation of Esther -- 2 Rabanus Maurus' Commentary -- 3 Martin Luther's Translation and Negation of the Book -- 4 Esther in Christian Liturgy, Theology, Art, and Music -- V Conclusion -- 11 Esther, the Jews, and Martin Luther -- I The Place of Luther's Approach in Christian Reception -- II Luther and the Figures of Esther and Mordecai: Positive Characterizations -- III Luther and the Book of Esther: Negative Characterizations -- IV An Understanding of Luther's Conflicting Attitudes toward Esther -- V Luther's Attitude toward Esther against the Background of His Approach to the Old Testament -- VI Luther's Attitude toward Esther against the Background of His Approaches to Judaism and Jews -- 1 Luther and Judaism -- 2 Luther's Friendly Approach toward Jews -- 3 Luther's Hostile Approach toward Jews -- VII Luther, the Book of Esther, and the "Ethnic Character" of the Jews -- VIII Haman, Antiochus Epiphanes, and Martin Luther -- IX Conclusion -- 12 Christian Anti-Esther and Judeophobic Interpretation -- I Christian Repudiations of Esther, Jews, and Judaism -- II Political Background and Parallels to These Anti-Jewish Accusations -- 1 Johann Gottlieb Fichte. , 2 Friedrich Rühs -- 3 Jakob Friedrich Fries -- III An "Antisemite Pogrom of the Jews" or Legitimate Self-Defense? -- 1 How Many Enemies Were Killed? -- 2 Who Was Killed and Why? -- 3 Self-Defense or Revenge? -- 4 Killing and Hanging of Haman's Sons -- 5 Purim Feast: Celebration of Deliverance -- IV Conclusion -- 13 Christian Pro-Esther Interpretation -- I Before the Holocaust -- The Case of Wilhelm Eduard Vischer -- II After the Holocaust -- III Conclusion -- 14 Synthesis and Conclusion -- I The Book of Esther -- II Esther and the Jews -- III Esther and the Christians -- Bibliography -- Authors Index -- Names and Subjects Index -- Sources Index -- Terms and Expressions Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Kalimi, Isaac The Book of Esther Between Judaism and Christianity Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,c2023 ISBN 9781009266123
    Language: English
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