405 research outputs found

    Using Video in the MFL Class Room: Hints and Tips

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    Overview of possible class room activities involving digital vide

    But somehow it was only television: West German Narratives of the fall of the Wall in recent novels and their screen adaptations

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    East Germans have long been criticised for harbouring a feeling of Ostalgie, a nostalgia for their old, Socialist state, but only recently has it become apparent that many west Germans obviously experience a similar sense of loss and longing for a seemingly simpler time before reunification. The texts that express these feelings tend to focus on the fall of the Wall as the pivotal point of change in German post-war history. Typically the characters in these books deny the significance and impact of this major political event and strive to reduce its importance, at best to a minor television moment. This attitude can be observed in the novels liegen lernen and Herr Lehmann and in their film adaptations. Despite having been accused of indulging a feeling of Westalgie, a closer analysis reveals that they are in fact deliberately provocative and challenge eastern and western stereotypes. In addition the films find ways to transport the books’ ironic narrative to the screen, and they also reinforce the authors’ implicitly critical attitude towards their characters’ political apathy by portraying the fall of the Wall in ways different to the books. The films react to the provocation voiced in the novels and function like an intertextual commentary as they integrate the opening of the border into a meaningful context for the protagonists and restore it to its historic importance

    Looking for redemption in a globalised North:representations of the Arctic in Judith Hermann’s Short Stories Kaltblau (Cold –Blue) and Die Liebe zu Ari Oskarsson (Love for Ari Oskarsson)

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    This paper explores the literary representation of Iceland and Norway in two short stories by contemporary German writer Judith Hermann. It analyses both the depiction of these countries as part of the globalised western world and the redemptive power they are tentatively ascribed by the author. Continuing a long German tradition of looking at Scandinavia from an almost colonial perspective, Hermann on the one hand presents these northern countries as a mere extension of central Europe, largely devoid of distinguishing national characteristics. At the same time she makes reference to the topos of the north as a vast and empty space and highlights both the specific arctic nature of the environment and the effect it has on her urban characters, who find themselves on a search for meaning and orientation in a postmodern fragmented world. Despite Hermann's overall sceptical attitude towards her characters' quest for happiness, these northern locations ultimately appear as potential places of self-realisation and enlightenment

    The benefits of student-led video production in the language for business classroom

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    The use of video in the language learning classroom has long been seen as a way to enrich the student experience and to increase student engagement. This case study presents a good practice example of student-led video production tasks. The project which is analysed here was conducted with undergraduate students of German at Aston University in Birmingham, UK. It examined student responses and student achievement in relation to a number of different video-based learning activities and explored the potential of student-led digital video production in a language for business context. Results of the study highlighted the various benefits of using video production tasks with language learners. In particular, the data demonstrated how video-based tasks embedded in a Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) approach and supported by adequate scaffolding, such as task-based learning structures, provide collaborative learning opportunities and increase students’ confidence

    Guide to Using VideoPad

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    Insgtructions for using freeware VideoPad for editing and subtitling digital vide

    "Warum bleiben wir eigentlich nicht immer hier?" Schweden als Projektionsraum fĂĽr deutsche SehnsĂĽchte in Kurt Tucholskys 'Schloss Gripsholm' und seinen beiden Verfilmungen

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    Aus deutscher Perspektive hat die Darstellung von Skandinavien als nördlicher, liminaler Raum, der paradoxerweise zugleich so eng mit der eigenen nationalen Identität verknüpft erscheint, dass man für Verhältnis der Staaten seit dem 19. Jahrhundert eine Form des kulturellen Kolonialismus gelten machen kann, eine lange Tradition. Diese Einstellung setzt sich in den modernen deutschen Darstellungen vom Norden fort, unter denen Kurt Tucholskys außerordentlich populäre „Sommergeschichte“ Schloß Gripsholm, deren Beliebtheit sich auch an der Existenz zweier erfolgreicher Verfilmungen ablesen lässt, eine zentrale und wegweisende Position einnimmt. Sowohl im Roman als auch in den beiden Adaptionen erscheint Schweden als utopischer Gegenentwurf, als eine liberale und moderne alternative Heimat, die zunächst Fluchtmöglichkeiten aus dem Deutschland der 1920er, 1930er und 1960er zu bieten scheint. Weit entfernt davon ein realistisches Bild von Skandinavien entwerfen zu wollen, überbieten sich besonders die beiden Filmversionen gegenseitig in stark ästhetisierenden Entwürfen eines mit nord-romantischen Zügen versehenen „Anti-Deutschland“, an denen sich die sozio-politischen Diskurse der Zeit ablesen lassen. Dieser Aufsatz beleuchtet die Funktionalisierung des Skandinavienbildes als Imaginations- und Reflexionsraum für deutsche Wünsche und Sehnsüchte und analysiert neben der zentralen Bedeutung der räumlichen Dimension auch die Alltagsmythologischen Aspekte der Schwedendarstellung in allen drei Werken
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