Die Wende Von Der Aufklärung Zur Romantik 1760-1820

Die Wende Von Der Aufklärung Zur Romantik 1760-1820
Author: Horst Albert Glaser
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 784
Release: 2000
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9789027234476

This volume is the twelfth to date in a series of works in French or English presenting the epochs and movements of a Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages (Histoire Comparée des Littératures de Langues Européennes). The original intention of the editors was to publish a four-volume history of European literature from 1760-1820, and the first of these volumes, Des Lumières au Romantisme. Genres en Vers, appeared as long ago as 1982. The volumes Genres en Prose and Théâtre are still awaited. In their absence the present volume, Epoche im _berblick, attempts a more comprehensive and rigorous treatment of the period and its historiographical problems than was initially planned, providing the reader with an overview of sixty eventful years of European literary history — years in which German Classicism coincided with the birth, initially in Germany and England, of Romanticism. And at the centre of this turbulent period of European intellectual and literary history stands the French Revolution.

Die Neueren Sprachen

Die Neueren Sprachen
Author: Wilhelm Viëtor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 714
Release: 1915
Genre: Languages, Modern
ISBN:

Vols. 1-5 include a separately paged section "Phonetische Studien. Beiblatt."

Semantic Theories in Europe, 1830-1930

Semantic Theories in Europe, 1830-1930
Author: Brigitte Nerlich
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 372
Release: 1992
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9027245460

It is widely believed by historians of linguistics that the 19th-century was largely devoted to historical and comparative studies, with the main emphasis on the discovery of soundlaws. Syntax is typically portrayed as a mere sideline of these studies, while semantics is seldom even mentioned. If it comes into view at all, it is usually assumed to have been confined to diachronic lexical semantics and the construction of some (mostly ill-conceived) typologies of semantic change. This book aims to destroy some of these prejudices and to show that in Europe semantics was an important, although controversial, area at that time. Synchronic mechanisms of semantic change were discovered and increasing attention was paid to the context of the sentence, to the speech situation and the users of the language. From being a semantics of transformations', a child of the biological-geological paradigm of historical linguistics with its close links to etymology and lexicography, the field matured into a semantics of comprehension and communication, set within a general linguistics and closely related to the emerging fields of psychology and sociology.