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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_BV047572291
    Format: 290 Seiten : , Illustrationen ; , 23.5 cm x 16.5 cm.
    ISBN: 978-3-8309-4442-3 , 3-8309-4442-X
    Series Statement: Populäre Kultur und Musik Band 32
    Note: Beiträge der interdisziplinären Tagung "Musikobjektgeschichten. Populäre Musik und materielle Kultur" (Oktober 2020, Weimar) - Vorwort
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-8309-9442-8
    Language: German
    Subjects: Ethnology , Musicology
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    Keywords: Popmusik ; Tonträger ; Abspielgerät ; Speichermedien ; Computermusik ; Sachkultur ; Museum ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift
    URL: Cover
    Author information: Pfleiderer, Martin, 1967-
    Author information: Jost, Christofer, 1977-
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Berkeley, Calif. [u.a.] :Univ. of California Press,
    UID:
    almafu_BV010434958
    Format: XVII, 297 S. : , Ill., Notenbeisp. ; , 24 cm.
    Edition: 1. paperback print.
    ISBN: 0-520-08820-4
    Note: Prospects: postmodernism and musicology -- From the other to the abject: music as cultural trope -- Music and representation: in the beginning with Haydn's Creation -- Musical narratology: a theoretical outline -- Felix culpa: Mendelssohn, Goethe, and the social force of musical expression -- The Lied as cultural practice: tutelage, gender, and desire in Mendelssohn's Goethe songs -- Cultural politics and musical form: the case of Charles Ives -- Consuming the exotic: Ravel's Daphnis and Chloe -- Autonomy, Elvis, Cinders, fingering Bach -- Mendelssohn: three Goethe songs.
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
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    Keywords: Postmoderne ; Klassische Musik ; Musikästhetik ; Postmoderne
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_BV022442426
    Format: XVI, 284 S. : , Ill., graph. Darst., Notenbeisp.
    Edition: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 978-1-58046-252-5 , 1-58046-252-9 , 978-1-58046-368-3
    Series Statement: Eastman studies in music 43
    Note: Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke. - Includes bibliographical references and index
    Language: English
    Subjects: German Studies , Ethnology , Musicology
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    Keywords: Walpurgisnacht ; Rezeption ; 1749-1832 Walpurgisnacht Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von ; 1809-1847 Die erste Walpurgisnacht Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Felix
    Author information: Cooper, John Michael, 1962-
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9960117382002883
    Format: 1 online resource (xxviii, 255 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-316-41106-0 , 1-316-41317-9 , 1-316-01477-0
    Content: Colours are increasingly important in our daily life but how did colour vision evolve? How have colours been made, used and talked about in different cultures and tasks? How do various species of animals see colours? Which physical stimuli allow us to see colours and by which physiological mechanisms are they perceived? How and why do people differ in their colour perceptions? In answering these questions and others, this book offers an unusually broad account of the complex phenomenon of colour and colour vision. The book's broad and accessible approach gives it wide appeal and it will serve as a useful coursebook for upper-level undergraduate students studying psychology, particularly cognitive neuroscience and visual perception courses, as well as for students studying colour vision as part of biology, medicine, art and architecture courses.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 08 Mar 2016). , Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Dedication -- Table of contents -- List of plates -- List of figures -- List of tables -- Preface -- 1 Colour vision in everyday life -- 1.1 Numbers and dimensions of colours: hue, colourfulness, brightness -- 1.2 Commonly used colour names in different languages -- 1.3 Development of colour vision and colour naming in children -- 1.4 History of colour pigments and dyes -- 1.5 Psychology and symbolic values of colours -- 1.6 Colour mixtures -- 1.6.1 Subtractive and additive mixtures -- 1.6.2 Pigment mixtures and palettes -- 1.6.3 Optical mixtures -- 1.7 Colour and pictorial art -- 1.8 Colour and music -- 1.9 Colour and literature -- 1.10 Colour and philosophy -- 2 The signals of colours: light and wavelengths -- 2.1 Light and darkness: early thoughts concerning the nature of colours -- 2.2 White light and spectral colours: Newton´s experiments -- 2.3 The rainbow -- 2.4 Properties of light: wavelength and frequency -- 2.5 Trichromatic nature of colour vision: all hues from three -- 2.6 Trichromatic colour production and reproduction -- 2.6.1 Additive mixtures using coloured lights (RGB) -- 2.6.2 Subtractive mixtures of coloured substances (CMYK) -- 2.7 Colour hierarchies: primary, elementary and complementary colours -- 2.8 Light of naturally occurring colours -- 2.8.1 Absorption colours: selective absorption and reflection -- 2.8.2 Structural colours: refraction, scattering, interference -- 2.8.2.1 Light refraction -- 2.8.2.2 Wavelength-related light scattering -- 2.8.2.3 Random light scattering and reflection of all wavelengths together -- 2.8.2.4 Interference -- 2.8.3 Radiating colours: the active production of coloured light -- 2.8.3.1 Heat radiation and fire -- 2.8.3.2 Fluorescence and phosphorescence -- 2.8.3.3 Photochemical processes, bioluminescence. , 3 Colours and viewing conditions: not only local wavelengths -- 3.1 Colour interactions within a visual image -- 3.1.1 Simultaneous contrast -- 3.1.2 Negative and positive afterimages -- 3.1.3 Colour constancy and coloured shadows -- 3.2 Alternative colour theories: Goethe and Hering -- 3.2.1 Goethe and his Farbenlehre -- 3.2.2 Hering and his theory of colour opponents -- 3.3 Our strange visual field, our eye movements and the creativity of our brain -- 3.3.1 All eyes are halfblind -- 3.3.2 Eyes must move to see -- 3.3.3 All eyes are partly colour blind -- 3.3.4 All eyes have a hole in the visual field -- 3.4 Colours without images -- 3.4.1 Synesthesia: colours of sounds and letters -- 3.4.2 Other examples of colours without images -- 4 Our biological hardware: eye and brain -- 4.1 Our three main kinds of vision -- 4.2 Eye -- 4.2.1 Refraction and image projection -- 4.2.2 Diaphragm of the eye: the iris -- 4.2.3 Sensor and processor: the retina -- 4.2.4 The visual receptor cells -- 4.3 Cones -- 4.3.1 The three kinds of cones -- 4.3.2 Cones and the sharp vision of lightness contrast -- 4.3.3 Cones and colour vision -- 4.3.4 Cone properties and the wavelength/intensity distributions in natural scenes -- 4.4 Rods -- 4.4.1 Seeing in darkness -- 4.4.2 Sensitivity of rods to different wavelengths of light -- 4.4.3 The possible role of rods in colour vision -- 4.5 Chemical mechanisms of light sensitivity -- 4.5.1 The visual pigments -- 4.5.2 Dark and light adaptation -- 4.5.3 Negative and positive afterimages -- 4.6 From eye to brain -- 4.6.1 Structure and function of nerve cells -- 4.6.2 Nerve cells of the retina -- 4.6.3 The visual pathway -- 4.6.4 Neuronal receptive fields and the processing of lightness contrast -- 4.6.5 Colour sensitivity of neurones -- 4.7 The further brain analysis of colour and shape -- 4.7.1 Cortical regions for visual functions. , 4.7.2 Colour sensitivity and cellular organization of cortical neurones -- 5 Eyes with unconventional properties: the 'red-green blinds' -- 5.1 John Dalton and his brother -- 5.2 Kinds of red-green blindness: cones and visual pigments -- 5.3 Inheritance: from mother to son -- 5.4 Occurrence of inherited red-green blindness within different populations -- 5.5 How do red-green blind persons see colours? -- 5.5.1 Colours (hues) are more similar to each other -- 5.5.2 Colours more difficult to discover when unsaturated, when in small objects, when in thin lines -- 5.5.3 Red colours might seem abnormally dark (protanopes, protanomals) -- 5.5.4 White/grey streak in blue/green part of spectrum (dichromats) -- 5.5.5 Can red-green blind individuals see some things better than normal trichromats? -- 5.6 Practical consequences of red-green blindness -- 5.6.1 Problems of everyday life -- 5.6.1.1 Irritating moments -- 5.6.1.2 Advice for normal trichromats -- 5.6.1.3 Parents and schools -- 5.6.1.4 Car driving -- 5.6.2 Problems at work -- 5.6.3 The usefulness of colour filters and other aids -- 5.7 Molecular biology and inherited red-green blindness: new perspectives -- 6 Other kinds of unconventional colour vision -- 6.1 Inherited blue-green blindness (tritanopia) -- 6.2 Inherited total colour blindness -- 6.2.1 Rod achromatopsia -- 6.2.2 S-cone (blue-cone) monochromacy -- 6.2.3 Inborn total colour blindness with normal visual acuity -- 6.3 Acquired colour blindness -- 6.3.1 Changes of colour vision after brain damage -- 6.3.2 Changes of colour vision caused by disease, drugs, poison, ageing -- 6.4 Variations in and above normal colour vision -- 7 Colour vision in different species of animals -- 7.1 Methods for comparative studies of (the capability for) colour vision. , 7.2 Different animal species: evolutionary relationships and general properties of eyes and visual receptor cells -- 7.3 Humans versus other primates, the evolution of trichromacy -- 7.4 Mammals other than primates -- 7.5 The vertebrate ancestors of mammals: reptiles, amphibians and fish -- 7.6 Birds -- 7.7 Invertebrates -- 7.7.1 Invertebrates with camera-like eyes -- 7.7.2 Invertebrates with compound eyes -- 7.8 Sensitivity to light polarization -- Appendices -- Appendix A Diagnosis and measurement of differences in colour vision -- A.1 Pseudoisochromatic plates -- A.1.1 Ishihara -- A.1.2 Other pseudoisochromatic tests -- A.2 Arrangement tests: Farnsworth D15 and 100 hue -- A.3 Practical tests: lanterns and wires -- A.4 Anomaloscope -- A.5 The neutral point of dichromats -- A.6 Genetic tests -- Appendix B Specification and measurement of colours -- B.1 Colour charts and systems -- B.1.1 Colour systems for practical use: Munsell colour system -- B.1.2 Measurement schemes: CIE chromaticity charts -- B.1.2.1 Nomenclature for specifying colours in xyz CIE chromaticity charts -- B.1.2.2 Calculations using the 1931 xyz CIE chromaticity chart -- B.1.2.3 Different versions of CIE chromaticity charts: other colour spaces -- B.2 Measurements using a colorimeter -- B.3 Measurements using a spectrophotometer -- Appendix C Light and lighting -- C.1 Wavelength and oscillation frequency of light -- C.2 Light refraction -- C.3 Quality of lighting -- C.4 Lighting and metameric colours -- C.5 Total intensity of lighting -- Appendix D Digital cameras -- D.1 Sensor and colour analysis -- D.2 Light sensitivity -- D.3 Colour constancy and white balance -- Appendix E Technical terms -- Notes -- Preface -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Appendix A -- Appendix B -- Appendix C -- Appendix D -- References. , Selected literature (with comments) -- Chapter 1. Colour vision in everyday life -- Chapters 2-3. Colour signals and visual fields -- Historical background (for the associated physiology, see references for Chapter 4) -- Chapter 4. Our biological hardware: eye and brain -- Specifically concerning colour vision -- Special subjects -- Chapters 5-6. Deviant colour vision -- Historical background -- Present-day accounts -- Chapter 7. Colour vision in different species of animal -- Appendix A. Tests concerning colour vision -- Appendices B, C and D. Colour systems and measurements -- light and illumination -- digital cameras -- Cited references -- Index -- Color plates. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-107-44354-7
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-107-08303-6
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 5
    Journal/Serial
    Journal/Serial
    Frankfurt, M. : PL Acad. Research | Frankfurt, M. : Lang ; 1.1987 -
    UID:
    gbv_130349364
    ISSN: 0175-6257
    Note: Erscheint teils auch als Online-Ausgabe , Springende Ersch.-Jahre , Einzelne Bände erscheinen in englischer Sprache
    Former: Sources and studies in music history from antiquity to the present
    Language: German
    Keywords: Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von 1749-1832 ; Volkslied ; Monografische Reihe
    Author information: Albrecht, Michael von 1933-
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin/Boston :De Gruyter,
    UID:
    almafu_9958354049702883
    Format: 1 online resource(x,414p.) : , illustrations.
    Edition: Electronic reproduction. Berlin/Boston : De Gruyter. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
    Edition: System requirements: Web browser.
    Edition: Access may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.
    ISBN: 9783110294699
    Series Statement: On Wittgenstein; 2
    Content: Wittgenstein took literature extremely seriously and did not consider it of secondary importance.However, academic philosophy often shies away from the literary inflection of his philosophy. This is the first book to provide detailed discussions of his engagement with individual authors, such as Dostoevsky, Goethe, and Shakespeare. The book is essential for the cultural contextualizationfor Wittgenstein scholars and scholars of literature.
    Note: Frontmatter -- , Table of Contents -- , List of Abbreviations -- , Introduction / , Being Lost and Finding Home: Philosophy, Confession, Recollection, and Conversion in Augustine’s Confessions and Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations / , The Character of a Name: Wittgenstein’s Remarks on Shakespeare / , To Not Understand, but Not Misunderstand: Wittgenstein on Shakespeare / , Sense and Sententiousness: Wittgenstein, Milton, Shakespeare / , Why the Tractatus, like the Old Testament, is "Nothing but a Book" / , Wittgenstein Lights Lichtenberg’s Candle: Flashlights of Enlightenment in Wittgenstein’s Thought / , Wittgenstein and Goethe: Getting Rid of "Sorge" / , Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Conservative Legacy of Johann Nepomuk Nestroy / , Best Readings: Wittgenstein and Grillparzer / , Wittgenstein’s Reception of Wagner: Language, Music, and Culture / , Ludwig Wittgenstein and Wilhelm Busch: "Humour is not a mood, but a ‘Weltanschauung’" / , Wittgenstein and Dostoevsky / , Wittgenstein Re-Reading / , The Significance of Dostoevsky (and Ludwig Anzengruber) for Wittgenstein / , A Remarkable Fact: Wittgenstein Reading Tolstoy / , Note to Self: Learn to Write Autobiographical Remarks from Wittgenstein / , Wittgenstein Reads Kürnberger / , Trakl’s Tone: Mood and the Distinctive Speech Act of the Demonstrative / , The Chimera of Language? Karl Kraus and Ludwig Wittgenstein / , Well-Versed: Wittgenstein and Leavis Read Empson / , The contributors of the volume -- , Index of Names. , Also available in print edition. , In English.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110294620
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110294705
    Language: English
    Subjects: Philosophy
    RVK:
    Keywords: Aufsatzsammlung ; Electronic books.
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 7
    UID:
    almafu_9960118822102883
    Format: 1 online resource (xvi, 284 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-58046-368-1 , 1-282-08067-9 , 9786612080678 , 1-58046-691-5
    Series Statement: Eastman studies in music
    Content: 'Mendelssohn, Goethe, and the Walpurgis Night' addresses tolerance and acceptance in the face of cultural, political, and religious strife. Its point of departure is the Walpurgis Night. The Night, also known as Beltane or May Eve, was supposedly an annual witches' Sabbath that centered around the Brocken, the highest peak of the Harz Mountains. After exploring how a notoriously pagan celebration came to be named after the Christian missionary St. Walpurgis (ca. 710-79), John Michael Cooper discusses the Night's treatments in several closely interwoven works by Goethe and Mendelssohn. His book situates those works in their immediate personal and professional contexts, as well as among treatments by a wide array of other artists, philosophers, and political thinkers, including Voltaire, Lessing, Shelley, Heine, Delacroix, and Berlioz. In an age of decisive political and religious conflict, Walpurgis Night became a heathen muse: a source of spiritual inspiration that was neither specifically Christian, nor Jewish, nor Muslim. And Mendelssohn's and Goethe's engagements with it offer new insights into its role in European cultural history, as well as into issues of political, religious, and social identity - and the relations between cultural groups - in today's world. John Michael Cooper is professor of music at Southwestern University and author of 'Mendelssohn's "Italian" Symphony' (Oxford University Press).
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Oct 2015). , The cultural and religious prehistories -- Tolerance, translation, and acceptance : Goethe's and Mendelssohn's voices in European cultural discourse to ca. 1850 -- Reality and illusion, past and present : Goethe and the Walpurgisnacht -- The composition, revision, and publication of Mendelssohn's Die erste Walpurgisnacht -- The sources, structure, and narrative of Mendelssohn's Walpurgisnacht settings -- At the crossroads of identity : critical and artistic responses to Goethe's and Mendelssohn's Walpurgisnacht treatments -- Performing identity and alterity : Die erste Walpurgisnacht then and now. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-58046-252-9
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London :Bloomsbury Academic, | London :Bloomsbury Publishing (UK),
    UID:
    almahu_9949870120802882
    Format: 1 online resource (472 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781350215337
    Series Statement: Bloomsbury Handbooks
    Content: Offering the first systematic overview of modern and contemporary Chinese literature from a translation studies perspective, this handbook provides students, researchers and teachers with a context in which to read and appreciate the effects of linguistic and cultural transfer in Chinese literary works. Translation matters. It always has, of course, but more so when we want to reap the benefits of intercultural communication. In many universities Chinese literature in English translation is taught as if it had been written in English. As a result, students submit what they read to their own cultural expectations; they do not read in translation and do not attend to the protocols of knowing, engagements and contestations that bind literature and society to each other. The Bloomsbury Handbook of Modern Chinese Literature in Translation squarely addresses this pedagogical lack. Organised in a tripartite structure around considerations of textual, social, and large-scale spatial and historical circumstances, its thirty plus essays each deal with a theme of translation studies, as emerged from the translation of one or more Chinese literary works. In doing so, it offers new tools for reading and appreciating modern and contemporary Chinese literature in the global context of its translation, offering in-depth studies about eminent Chinese authors and their literary masterpieces in translation. The first of its kind, this book is essential reading for anyone studying or researching Chinese literature in translation.
    Note: Introduction: Mapping Modern Chinese Literature in Translation, (Cosima Bruno, Associate Professor of Chinese Literature, SOAS University of London, UK; Lucas Klein, Associate Professor of Chinese, Arizona State University, USA; Chris Song, Assistant Professor of English and Chinese Translation, at the University of Toronto, Canada) Section One: The Plural Aesthetic of Translation Chapter one: Reading Chinese-English Translations as Versions, Nick Admussen (Associate Professor, Cornell University, USA) Chapter two: Translation - Legibility - Sixiang, Michael Gibbs Hill (Associate Professor in Chinese Studies, William & Mary University, VA, USA) Chapter three: A Song not for Dancing: Translation, Adaptation and Poetics in Soviet, Taiwanese and Mainland Chinese Rock Music of the 1980s, Sasha Hsiang-yin Chen (Assistant Professor Academia Sinica, Taiwan) Chapter four: Translation and Chinese Avant-garde Fiction, Paola Iovene (Associate Professor in Chinese Literature, University of Chicago, USA) Chapter five: Queer Translation, Chi Ta-wei (Assistant Professor, National Chengchi University, Taiwan) Chapter six: Voices from the In-Between: Chinese Internet Avant-garde Classicist Poetry at the Crossroad, Zhiyi Yang (Professor of Sinology, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany) Chapter seven: Pseudotranslation in Zhou Shoujuan's Love Stories, Jane Qian Liu (Assistant Professor of Translation and Chinese Studies, University of Warwick, UK) Chapter eight: The Success of Chinese Science Fiction, Cara Healey (Assistant Professor of Chinese and Asian Studies, Wabash College, IN, USA) Chapter nine: Translating "Bird Talk": Cross-Cultural Translation, Bergsonian Intuition, and Transnational Modernism in Fiction of Xu Xu, Frederick Green (Associate Professor of Chinese, San Francisco State University, USA) Chapter ten: Ling Shuhua and the Bloomsbury Group: Modernism, Autobiography, and Translation, Jeesoon Hong (Professor of Chinese Media Culture, Sogang University, South Korea) Chapter eleven: Sappho's Younger Brother: Shao Xunmei, Translation, and his Golden House Bookshop, Paul Bevan (Lecturer in Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, Wadham College, Oxford, UK) Section Two: Production and Reception Chapter twelve: Perceptions of Power in Literary Translation: translators and translatees (Bonnie McDougall (Visiting Professor in Chinese, University of Sidney, Australia) Chapter thirteen: State-Sponsored Institutional Translation of Chinese Literature, 1951-1983, Ma Huijuan (Professor of Translation Studies, Editor ofTranslation Horizons, Beijing Foreign Studies University, PRC) Chapter fourteen: Translating American Literature into Chinese during the Cold War Era: The Literary Translation and Cultural Politics of the World Today Press, Shan Te-hsing (Distinguished Research Fellow, Academia Sinica Taiwan) Chapter fifteen: Assessment Labour in Chinese Literature Translation, Jonathan Stalling (Professor of English, University of Oklahoma, USA) Chapter sixteen: Chinese crime fiction in translation. The international circulation of a peripheral macro-genre, Paolo Magagnin (Associate Professor, University of Ca' Foscari, Italy) Chapter seventeen: The Penumbra and the Shadow - Editing Translations of Modern Chinese Literature, Ping Zhu (Professor of Modern Chinese Literature, University of Oklahoma, USA, Editor of Chinese Literature and Thought Today) Chapter eighteen: The Chinese Fiction Book Cover Archive, Marta Dos Santos (Independent Scholar) Chapter nineteen: Madmen, Marxists, and Modernists: A Century of Lu Xun in Translation, Daniel Dooghan (Associate Professor of English Writing University of Tampa, FL, USA) Chapter twenty: The Translation of Migrant Worker Literature: China's Battler Poetry, Maghiel van Crevel (Professor of Chinese Language and Literature, Leiden University, Netherlands) Chapter twenty-one: Fairytales in Action: Chinese online fiction, English fan translation, and the fan as the author, Rachel Suet Kay Chan (Research Fellow, The National University of Malaysia, Malaysia) Chapter twenty-two: Online Translation of Webnovels, Zhang Yin (PhD Candidate in Translation and Interpretation, University of Geneva, Switzerland) Chapter twenty-three: The Reader in Jin Yong's Condor Heroes, Shelly Bryant (Independent Scholar, Singapore) Section Three: Living in Translation Chapter twenty-four: Sinophone Routes: Translation, Self-translation and Deterritorialization, Nicoletta Pesaro (Professor, Università di Ca' Foscari, Italy) Chapter twenty-five: Translation in a Multilingual Context: Six women authors writing the city Cosima Bruno (Reader in Chinese Literature, SOAS, University of London, UK) Chapter twenty-six: Hong Kong and Macao Literatures in Translation: Reconceptualizing outward and inward translation, Chris Song (Assistant Professor in English and Chinese Translation, University of Toronto) Chapter twenty-seven: Tibetan Literature, Yangdon Dhondup (Independent Scholar) Chapter twenty-eight: Taiwanese Literature, Wen-chi Li (Post-Doctoral Fellow, University of Oxford, UK) Chapter twenty-nine: Translating Singapore Chinese literature, TK Lee (Associate Professor of Translation, Hong Kong University) & E.K. Tan (Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Sinophone Studies, Stony Brook University, New York, USA) Chapter thirty: The Translator as Cultural Ambassador: The Case of Lin Yutang, James St André (Professor of Translation, Chinese University of Hong Kong) Chapter thirty-one: 'An Exercise in Futility': Zhang Ailing as a Self-Translator, Dylan Wang (PhD candidate, SOAS University of London, UK) Chapter thirty-two: Exophony, translation, and transnationalism in Gao Xingjian's French/Chinese plays, Mary Mazzilli (Lecturer in Drama and Literature, University of Essex, UK) Chapter thirty-three: Born Translated? On the Opposition Between "Chineseness" and Modern Chinese Literature Written for and from Translation, Lucas Klein (Associate Professor, University of Arizona, USA) Chapter thirty-four: Teaching MCL in/and Translation, Michel Hockx (Professor of Chinese Literature, University of Notre Dame, Indiana, USA)
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bielefeld :transcript,
    UID:
    almahu_9949369328802882
    Format: 1 online resource (263 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783839450604
    Series Statement: Queer Studies
    Note: Cover -- Contents -- Introduction -- I. Queer Istanbul -- 1. Istanbul: Queer Desires Between Muslim Tradition and Global Pop -- 12 points -- Turkey's Transitional Periods: Kemalist Modernization, Military Coups, Queer Activism -- Sex Between Men: Ottoman Tradition and Turkish Everyday Life -- Istanbul at Night: Queer Literature, Arabesk Music, and Gay Bars -- 2. Architecture of Seduction, or: What (Really) Goes On in the Hamam? -- Travelers' Hamam Fantasies -- Lady Montagu Visits the Hamam -- Harem Suare: Fictions within Fictions -- Hamam: The Official Tour Guide Version -- After Sex Is before Sex: The Hamam as Sacred Space of Transition -- Hamam: Architecture of Seduction -- Archives of Feeling: Hamam's Queer Temporality -- II. Istanbul and the Queer Stage -- 3. "But we are all androgynous:" James Baldwin's Staging America in Turkey -- Speaking from Another Place -- The Reluctant Queer -- Stranger in the City -- Freaks at the Welcome Table -- 4. "Built for Europeans who came on the Orient Express:" Queer Desires of Extravagant Strangers in Sinan Ünel's Pera Palas -- "a fucking palace:" Grand Hotel -- "Where memory is, theatre is:" Harem as Memorial -- "a place without a place:" Queer Space -- "A kiss is just a kiss?" Extravagant Strangers -- III. Transnational Queer Poetics -- 5. "The Wonder of Thy Beauty:" Bayard Taylor's Poems of the Orient as an Intermediary Between German Romanticism and American Gentility -- The Arabian Indifference to Time-Moving From East to West -- From West to East to West-Cross-Cultural Counterpoints -- "Wahlheimatliteratur"-Taylor Reading Rückert Reading Goethe -- "Unwinding the Turban:" Poems of the Orient as American Pastoral -- Emblematic Male Oriental Beauty-Emulating Hafiz -- Taylor's Travels to the Orient-Expanding Genteel Expectations -- 6. Bastardized History: Elif Shafak's Transcultural Poetics. , Comic Survival or the Endless Repeat Melody -- Elegiac Metropolis or "A Bridge in Between" -- Edible City, or the Etho-Poetics of Food and Sex -- IV. Performing Queer Turkish Cultures -- 7. Precarious Masculinities in the New Turkish Cinema -- From Yeşilçam to New Turkish Cinema: Black Turks and Nationalist Masculinity -- Precarious Masculinities in the New Turkish‑German Cinema: The Melodramatic Penis and Trans‑Masculinity -- 8. Arabesk: Nomadic Tales, Oriental Beats, and Hybrid Looks -- Arabesk's Impurity: From Anatolia to Istanbul -- From Tatlıses's Nostalgic Anatolian Machismo to Emrah's Sexed‑Up Hard Body -- Flamboyant Transgression? Bülent Ersoy -- Orientalized Pop-Export: Tarkan.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Poole, Ralph J. Queer Turkey Bielefeld : transcript,c2022 ISBN 9783837650600
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books.
    URL: Cover
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  • 10
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