DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Hits 1 – 20 of 112

1
LINGUIST List Resources for Croatia Sign Language
BASE
Show details
2
The mediating role of parents and school in peer aggression problems ; Posredniška vloga staršev in šole pri vrstniškem nasilju
In: CEPS Journal 12 (2022) 1, S. 169-188 (2022)
BASE
Show details
3
Glottolog 4.4 Resources for Croatian Sign Language
: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
BASE
Show details
4
The Island Name Krk, Croatia, in its Mediterranean and European Context ; Название острова Крк (Хорватия) в средиземноморском и общеевропейском контексте
Коутс, Р.; Coates, R.. - : Издательство Уральского университета, 2020
BASE
Show details
5
Sprachsegregation in Post-Jugoslawien - Ideologie und Realität
Hamzić, Ermina. - 2020
BASE
Show details
6
A Research Guide to Southeastern Europe: Print and Electronic Sources
In: Library Staff Publications (2019)
BASE
Show details
7
Grammatik in Texten im Deutschunterricht (Deutsch als Zweitsprache und Deutsch als Fremdsprache) - ein internationaler Vergleich Deutschland - Kroatien
Kurevija, Mirna (Dr. phil.). - : Ludwigsburg : Pädagogische Hochschule Ludwigsburg, 2019
BASE
Show details
8
Predictors of bullying and victimisation in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ... : Napovedovalci ustrahovanja in viktimizacije otrok z motnjo pozornosti s hiperaktivnostjo ...
BASE
Show details
9
Croatia Sign Language: a language of Croatia
: SIL International, 2018
BASE
Show details
10
Croatian Language Standardization and the Production of Nationalized Political Subjects through Language? Perspectives from the Social Sciences and Humanities ...
Amelia, Abercrombie; John Hodges, Andrew. - : Humanities Commons, 2018
BASE
Show details
11
Predictors of bullying and victimisation in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ; Napovedovalci ustrahovanja in viktimizacije otrok z motnjo pozornosti s hiperaktivnostjo
In: CEPS Journal 8 (2018) 4, S. 63-88 (2018)
BASE
Show details
12
Croatia as a virtual tourist destination: A linguistic and sentiment analysis
M. Bait; B. Valkovic; S. Jurin. - : University of Rijeka Faculty of tourism and hospitality management, 2018. : place:Opatija (Croatia), 2018
BASE
Show details
13
English communicative competence and predominant language for online use through smartphones in Croatia as compared to Slovenia
In: ExELL (Explorations in English Language and Linguistics), Vol 6, Iss 2, Pp 130-162 (2018) (2018)
BASE
Show details
14
My neighbour, the criminal: how memories of the 1991-1995 conflict in Croatia affect attitudes towards the Serb minority
In: Nations and Nationalism (2017) (In press). (2017)
BASE
Show details
15
Samoidentyfikacja oraz kulturowa i polityczna tożsamość Serbów vukovarskich po 1995 roku ; Самоідентифікація і культурна та політична тотожність вуковарських сербів після 1995 р.
In: Studia Politologica Ucraino-Polona; № 7 (2017); 59-69 ; 2312-8933 (2017)
BASE
Show details
16
Die sprachliche Situation im Schulwesen der Stadt Zagreb
Pranjic, Ivana. - 2017
BASE
Show details
17
Advances in understanding multilingualism : a global perspective
Aladrović Slovaček, Katarina; Andersen, Katja; Yağmur, Kutlay. - Wien : Peter Lang Edition, 2016
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
18
From Velebit to Casablanca: (re)construction of geography and identity in the names of Croatian enterprises
In: Europa Regional ; 13.2005 ; 3 ; 123-132 (2016)
BASE
Show details
19
De Musica Disserenda, XII/1, 2016: Nineteenth-Century Music in Central Europe: Paradigms and Popular Canon
Cavallini, I; Zorawska-Witkowska, A; Slavicky, T; Tuksar, S; Katalinic, V; Badurina, N; Cigoj Krstulovic, N; White, H. - : Muzikoloski Institut ZRC SAZU, 2016. : country:SI, 2016. : place:Lubiana, 2016
Abstract: Nations and nationalism have been a main research topic for decades, but the last few years have witnessed noticeable growth in these studies. The perspective generally accepted in the humanities – that demands for political independence of the nations in nineteenth-century Central Europe were premised on a sense of cultural identity – has also been taken up by contemporary musicological thought. Essays by philosopher and social anthropologist Ernest Gellner on “invented nations” in Nations and Nationalism (1983), or by historian and political scientist Benedict Anderson on “imagined communities” in Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (1991), supported the idea that cultural constructs influenced the political interpretation of states. The concepts of “people” and “nation”, which penetrated Central Europe from the end of the eighteenth century, are often interchangeable. The term “people” hides an ambiguous ethnic but unambiguous social meaning related to the use of a common language and sometimes to profession of the same religious faith. The concept of “nation”, instead, possesses an ethic value, a quest for alterity and produces the effect of exclusion of the “other”. The origin of the concept of nation in nineteenth-century Central Europe, more specifically the historical paradigm and the popular musical canon, was also the central research task of the Study Group “Music and Nation” at the international congress “Nationalisms and Irredentisms of Mitteleuropa”, which was held in November 2012 in Gorizia. It was organized by the Institute for Cultural Encounters of Mitteleuropa (Istituto per gli Incontri Culturali Mitteleuropei), with the helpful and welcome support of its head, Fulvio Salimbeni, and secretary Marco Plesnicar. The participants focused on political, linguistic, ethnic and cultural paradigms which, after Herder’s discovery of Volkslied, enabled the recognition of certain popular or church songs in the process of creating a historical canon representative of ethnic and territorial identity. Some of the contributions from that conference are now presented in this volume of De musica disserenda. The introductory study examines the national identity of Slavic Central Europe by means of a new approach to various cultural paradigms, namely the historical events out of which the popular musical canon flourished at the end of eighteenth-century Poland, and in nineteenth-century Bohemia, Slovenia and Croatia (Ivano Cavallini: “Cultural Paradigm and Popular Canon: The Discourse on Nation in Nineteenth-Century Music of Slavic Mitteleuropa”). The next articles are case studies and refer to various stages of the identification process: from exoticism to self-consciousness and from self-consciousness to the appropriation of the national style in music. The authors do not take into consideration the quality of music, but rather its social functions as identified by Polish, Czech, Croatian and Slovene patriots from the end of eighteenth-century to the nineteenth century (Alina Żórawska-Witkowska: “Popolo, nazione e patria nelle prime opere polacche (1778–1794)”; Tomáš Slavický: “Musica, identità e mitografie nazionali dei cechi nel diciannovesimo secolo”; Stanislav Tuksar: “The Invention of Musical Illyrism”; Vjera Katalinić: “How to Create a National Opera? The Lisinski Case. Imaginary Memoirist Sketches with an Epilogue”; Natka Badurina: “Croatian Historical Myth, the South-Slavic Brotherhood and the Death of Opera”; Nataša Cigoj Krstulović: “Language, Literature and Music in Slovenian Cultural and Political Aspirations before 1914”). The final article presents the immense influence of James Macpherson’s Ossian poems on the formation of German Romanticism, the extent to which Bardendichtung and an awareness of Scottish and Irish melodies existed independently in the German musical imagination (Harry White: “Macpherson, Ossian and the Bardic Ideal: Some Irish Reflections on a German Phenomenon”).
Keyword: 19th-Century Music; Austria; Bohemia; Croatia; Germany; Mitteleuropa; Paradigms; Poland; Popular and Art Music; Settore L-ART/07 - Musicologia E Storia Della Musica; Slovenia
URL: https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/dmd/issue/view/426
http://hdl.handle.net/10447/202381
BASE
Hide details
20
Minority languages in Europe and beyond : results and prospects
Ureland, P. Sture (Hrsg.). - Berlin : Logos, 2015
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Catalogues
22
5
1
0
0
3
5
Bibliographies
56
4
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
35
1
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern