@book{AckermannKarremannMalhotraetal.2021, author = {Ackermann, Zeno and Karremann, Isabel and Malhotra, Simi and Zaidi, Nishat}, title = {Terrains of Consciousness: Multilogical Perspectives on Globalization}, edition = {1. Auflage}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, isbn = {978-3-95826-168-6}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-169-3}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-243936}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {x, 150}, year = {2021}, abstract = {TERRAINS OF CONSCIOUSNESS emerges from an Indian-German-Swiss research collaboration. The book makes a case for a phenomenology of globalization that pays attention to locally situated socioeconomic terrains, everyday practices, and cultures of knowledge. This is exemplified in relation to three topics: - the tension between 'terrain' and 'territory' in Defoe's 'Robinson Crusoe' as a pioneering work of the globalist mentality (chapter 1) - the relationship between established conceptions of feminism and the concrete struggles of women in India since the 19th century (chapter 2) - the exploration of urban space and urban life in writings on India's capital - from Ahmed Ali to Arundhati Roy (chapter 3).}, subject = {Globalisierung}, language = {en} } @incollection{AckermannSnyderKoerber2023, author = {Ackermann, Zeno and Snyder-K{\"o}rber, MaryAnn}, title = {Series Foreword : JMU Cultural Studies - Strategies for Struggling with the Obvious}, series = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, booktitle = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2-iii}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305801}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {iii-v}, year = {2023}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, subject = {Kulturwissenschaften}, language = {en} } @book{AgbokhanSandigHaasetal.2023, author = {Agbokhan, Serena and Sandig, Anna and Haas, Thea and Valentin, Francesca and Gasteiger, Annika and von Keller, Anna and Friedmann, Fiona and Wicht, Rebecca and Wintermeyer, Nina and Hofmann, Anna-Lena and Liebich, Alexander and B{\"o}rdlein, Sophie and L{\"u}deritz, Cathrin and Philipp, Sonja and Watermann, Anne and Hercher, Anna}, title = {Insights;}, editor = {Nelson-Teutsch, Hannah}, isbn = {978-3-945459-44-7}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-31700}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-317007}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, pages = {99}, year = {2023}, abstract = {The cluster of texts assembled here were imagined, crafted, and brought together as a collaborative writing project that emerged from the seminar titled "Words Matter Worlds: Activist Scholarship and Literary Praxis," which convened over the course of the 2021/22 winter semester as an offering of the American Studies department of the Julius-Maximilians-Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg. Like the seminar that nurtured the considerations that evolve here, these contributions engage with how scholarly writing practices in general, and literary and cultural studies in particular, can remake the world.}, subject = {Aktivist}, language = {en} } @article{AyalaCarrilloFarfanCardenasNielsenetal.2022, author = {Ayala-Carrillo, Mariana and Farf{\´a}n, Michelle and C{\´a}rdenas-Nielsen, Anah{\´i} and Lemoine-Rodr{\´i}guez, Richard}, title = {Are wildfires in the wildland-urban interface increasing temperatures? A land surface temperature assessment in a semi-arid Mexican city}, series = {Land}, volume = {11}, journal = {Land}, number = {12}, issn = {2073-445X}, doi = {10.3390/land11122105}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-297308}, year = {2022}, abstract = {High rates of land conversion due to urbanization are causing fragmented and dispersed spatial patterns in the wildland-urban interface (WUI) worldwide. The occurrence of anthropogenic fires in the WUI represents an important environmental and social issue, threatening not only vegetated areas but also periurban inhabitants, as is the case in many Latin American cities. However, research has not focused on the dynamics of the local climate in the WUI. This study analyzes whether wildfires contribute to the increase in land surface temperature (LST) in the WUI of the metropolitan area of the city of Guanajuato (MACG), a semi-arid Mexican city. We estimated the pre- and post-fire LST for 2018-2021. Spatial clusters of high LST were detected using hot spot analysis and examined using ANOVA and Tukey's post-hoc statistical tests to assess whether LST is related to the spatial distribution of wildfires during our study period. Our results indicate that the areas where the wildfires occurred, and their surroundings, show higher LST. This has negative implications for the local ecosystem and human population, which lacks adequate infrastructure and services to cope with the effects of rising temperatures. This is the first study assessing the increase in LST caused by wildfires in a WUI zone in Mexico.}, language = {en} } @article{Bach1989, author = {Bach, Ulrich}, title = {Oral rhetoric in writings for a mixed literate and illiterate audience}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-47124}, year = {1989}, abstract = {No abstract available}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Chikezie2017, author = {Chikezie, Aloysius Cheta}, title = {THE VALUE OF WORK IN NIGERIA with Reference to Laborem Exercens}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147592}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Work is seen by many thinkers as the fundamental dimension of man`s existence on earth. Through work, he provides his basic necessities on earth and co-operate with God in the work of creation. He received this mandate to work from the very beginning of creation by God. In carrying out this mandate, man every human being reflects the very action of the creator of the Universe. God worked and intended that man who is created in His image and likeness continues the work of creation by working. Even though Man suffers and sweats through work and yet, in spite of all this toil-perhaps in a sense because of it - work is a good thing for man. It is not only good in the sense that it is useful or something to enjoy; it is also good as being something worthy, that is to say something that corresponds to man's dignity that expresses this dignity and increases it. This project examines man as a creature called to work and born into work. It is true that through work, man provides himself and his family with the basic necessities of life and everyday needs for the reason he charges wages for his sweat. Work goes beyond and should exceed the boundaries of the material benefit that comes out of it to the satisfaction and fulfilment for the very purpose we should work. The modern society has attached so much importance to money and material possession, the question then is how do we go along working in the spirit of improvement and renewal of the earth? The modern man understands work only as a means of making his daily bread. For this reason, he engages himself in an occupation that he has little or no interest in. He ends up quarrelling everyday with the people that he or she is supposed to serve through work. The result is low work output and waste of talents and the society loses an opportunity for improvement as every creature is supposed to contribute uniquely. A good example is Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation with a population estimate of about over 170,000,000 people and the sixth Oil producing Nation.}, subject = {Nigeria}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{DomeneMoreno2021, author = {Domene Moreno, Christina}, title = {Beyond transfer? The acquisition of an L3 phonology by Turkish-German bilinguals}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23141}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-231411}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Der Erwerb des phonologischen Systems einer Drittsprache wurde bisher vor allem vor dem Hintergrund zweier Fragen betrachtet: (a) Welche Sprache oder Sprachen werden in die Zielsprache transferiert und (b) welche Rolle spielen inner- und außersprachliche Faktoren dabei? Hier sind grunds{\"a}tzlich drei Szenarien denkbar, welche sich auch in den im Forschungsfeld vorherrschenden theoretischen Ans{\"a}tzen wiederfinden. Bei einem bilingualen Sprecher, also einem Sprecher mit zwei Hintergrundsprachen, ist erstens der ausschließliche Transfer einer der Hintergrundsprachen m{\"o}glich, wobei f{\"u}r die Vorhersage der Sprache, die am wahrscheinlichsten transferiert wird, verschiedene Parameter vorgeschlagen wurden, wie beispielsweise das typologische Verh{\"a}ltnis der Hintergrund- und Zielsprachen untereinander oder der Status einer der beiden Hintergrundsprachen als Erst- bzw. Zweitsprache. Weiterhin ist Transfer aus beiden Sprachen denkbar, bei dem ausschließlich „n{\"u}tzliche", das heißt den Zielspracherwerb unterst{\"u}tzende Strukturen transferiert werden. Drittens kann gemischter Transfer, also der Transfer verschiedener Strukturen, aus beiden Hintergrundsprachen angenommen werden, der allerdings nicht unbedingt positiv ist, sondern stattdessen von vielf{\"a}ltigen Faktoren konditioniert wird. In anderen Worten wird hier die M{\"o}glichkeit angenommen, Strukturen aus beiden Hintergrundsprachen in die Zielsprache zu transferieren. Dieser letzte Ansatz entspricht am besten den bisherigen Forschungsergebnissen des Felds: W{\"a}hrend sich bei Betrachtung verschiedener Sprachkombinationen und verschiedener (und verschiedenartiger) phonologischer Strukturen f{\"u}r sich genommen kein einheitliches Muster erkennen l{\"a}sst, wird deutlich, dass gemischter Transfer m{\"o}glich ist - dies kommt vor allem bei Studien zu graduellen phonetischen Ph{\"a}nomenen wie konkreter Vokalqualit{\"a}t oder Voice Onset Time zum Ausdruck. Bisherige Studien haben sich auf einzelne phonologische oder phonetische Ph{\"a}nomene beschr{\"a}nkt, anhand derer die entsprechenden Ans{\"a}tze {\"u}berpr{\"u}ft wurden. Bisher gibt es keine systematischen Untersuchungen mehrerer verschiedener Ph{\"a}nomene an denselben Sprechern. Da allerdings davon ausgegangen werden kann, dass phonologische Ph{\"a}nomene unterschiedliche strukturelle Eigenschaften haben, ist genau dies n{\"o}tig. Um also die Mechanismen des gleichzeitigen Transfers mehrerer Sprachen auf eine Zielsprache, und somit auch die Interaktion der Hintergrundsprachen in Multilingualen besser zu verstehen, m{\"u}ssen mehrere phonologische Strukturen an denselben Sprechergruppen und mit denselben Methoden untersucht werden. Diese Forschungsl{\"u}cke will die vorliegende Arbeit schließen. Hierf{\"u}r wurde der Erwerb des Lautsystems der Drittsprache Englisch durch t{\"u}rkisch-deutsch bilinguale Lerner untersucht. Es wurden phonologische Strukturen des Englischen zur Untersuchung ausgew{\"a}hlt, die entweder im Deutschen (aber nicht im T{\"u}rkischen), im T{\"u}rkischen (aber nicht im Deutschen), oder in keiner der beiden Hintergrundsprachen vorkommen. Diese Unterteilung sollte dazu dienen den potentiellen Einfluss der jeweiligen Hintergrundsprache auf die Zielsprache identifizieren zu k{\"o}nnen. In zwei Studien wurden jeweils die Perzeption und die Produktion der obengenannten Strukturen an t{\"u}rkisch-deutsch Bilingualen sowie an einer monolingual deutschen Kontrollgruppe getestet. Studie 1 testete junge Lerner des Englischen in den ersten Lernjahren, w{\"a}hrend Studie 2 Studierende der Englischen Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft testete. Zus{\"a}tzlich wurden extralinguistische Faktoren und biographische Details erhoben. In den beiden Studien sollte beantwortet werden, ob sich bilinguale und monolinguale Testpersonen in der Perzeption und/oder der Produktion der Zielstrukturen unterscheiden, ob diese Unterschiede durch Transfer aus den Hintergrundsprachen zu erkl{\"a}ren sind und, falls dies nicht durchgehend der Fall ist, welche anderen strukturellen oder extralinguistischen Faktoren herangezogen werden k{\"o}nnen, um die Ergebnisse zu erkl{\"a}ren. Zudem sollte gepr{\"u}ft werden, inwieweit Perzeption und Produktion zusammenh{\"a}ngen und welchen Effekt fortschreitender Spracherwerb hat. Die Ergebnisse der beiden Studien dieser Arbeit best{\"a}tigen die Vermutung, die anhand der Kombination aus verschiedenen vorausgehenden Studien getroffen wurden: Transfer findet ausgehend von beiden Hintergrundsprachen statt, er kann positiv und negativ sein, und er wird von strukturellen Faktoren konditioniert. So zeigte sich im Vergleich ein deutlicher Einfluss - sowohl positiv wie auch negativ - des T{\"u}rkischen auf die Perzeption und Produktion des Englischen bei den bilingualen Sprechern, aber ebenso ein Einfluss des Deutschen. Weiterhin konnte der gleichzeitige Einfluss beider Hintergrundsprachen auf einzelne Strukturen belegt werden. Perzeption und Produktion stehen bei keiner der Sprechergruppen in einer direkten Korrelation, allerdings kann anhand der Ergebnisse Perzeption als einer der Faktoren angenommen werden, der einen Einfluss auf die Produktion der zielsprachlichen Struktur hat. Als weitere Faktoren konnten der Grad der Markiertheit der Struktur, ihre artikulatorische Komplexit{\"a}t sowie das Fehlen eines artikulatorischen Ankers identifiziert werden. Eine Verschiebung der Transferquellen fand zwischen den beiden Studien, also bedingt durch fortgeschrittenen Erwerb, nicht statt. Es konnte allerdings gezeigt werden, dass Nachteile, die aufgrund der Hintergrundsprachen den Sprechergruppen entstanden, in der {\"a}lteren Gruppe h{\"a}ufig ausgeglichen werden konnten. Die Erkl{\"a}rungsans{\"a}tze f{\"u}r das Autreten von CLI-Effekten waren abh{\"a}ngig von den Eigenschaften der einzelnen abgepr{\"u}ften Strukturen und konnten nicht systematisch verallgemeinert werden. Dies best{\"a}tigte die wenig einheitlichen Einzelergebnisse vorhergehender Studien f{\"u}r die Perzeption und Produktion mehrerer verschiedener phonologischer Strukturen durch dieselben Sprechergruppen. So konnten methodische oder gruppeninterne Gr{\"u}nde f{\"u}r die sich widersprechenden Ergebnisse erstmals ausgeschlossen werden. Im vorletzten Kapitel dieser Arbeit werden darauf aufbauend alternative Gr{\"u}nde f{\"u}r die Ergebnisse erarbeitet. Hierf{\"u}r wird das Konzept des komplexen verschachtelten (complex interlaced) eingef{\"u}hrt, das chaostheoretische Ans{\"a}tze mit der Annahme einer hierarchischen Bit-Struktur verbindet. Die vorliegende Arbeit tr{\"a}gt zu aktuellen Debatten im Bereich der Drittsprachforschung insofern bei, als dass sie als erste mehrere phonologische „Einheiten" (bits), also Phoneme, Allophone, Prozesse etc., an den gleichen Sprechern testet. Dadurch wurde deutlich, dass die konkrete Struktur phonologischer Systeme in den Mittelpunkt der Forschung zum Drittspracherwerb r{\"u}cken muss, damit vorhandene Muster erkennbar werden k{\"o}nnen. Zudem wird vorgeschlagen, verst{\"a}rkt auf Forschungsergebnisse und Theorien aus anderen Bereichen, wie beispielsweise dem Sprachwandel, der Variet{\"a}tenlinguistik und der Kontaktlinguistik zur{\"u}ckzugreifen, um letztendlich Forschung am Drittspracherwerb f{\"u}r den theoretischen Erkenntnisgewinn nutzbar zu machen.}, subject = {Englisch}, language = {en} } @incollection{Doering2023, author = {D{\"o}ring, Adrian}, title = {A New International}, series = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, booktitle = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2-87}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305898}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {87-93}, year = {2023}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, subject = {Kulturwissenschaften}, language = {en} } @article{Fick2013, author = {Fick, Annabella}, title = {Conrad Hilton, Be My Guest and American Popular Culture}, series = {European Journal of Life Writing}, volume = {2}, journal = {European Journal of Life Writing}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-129221}, pages = {18-34}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Hotels are popular settings in European and American literature. They fire readers' imagination and many of them have a personal relationship to hotels. These institutions are not only alive in the realm of literature but are real existing buildings which have become fixed parts of modern society. Conrad Hilton (1887-1979), founder of the international hotel chain of the same name, was very aware of the glamorous aspects of his field of profession and published his experiences in the autobiography Be My Guest (1957). One copy of the book was placed in each room of the Hilton chain. Due to this Hilton was reaching an enormous audience which inspired other writers to fictionalize Hilton and turn him into a character in their own books. In this paper I will show how Conrad Hilton achieved world-wide fame, partly with the help of his life account. Furthermore, the methods will be explained that he used to present himself as a prototypical American of the Cold War era. I will then focus on two fictional texts, Arthur Hailey's novel Hotel (1965) and the TV-show Mad Men (2007) by Matthew Weiner, which both incorporated Hilton as a character, yet in very different ways. The aim of this article is to show the potential of celebrity autobiographies to inspire other cultural creations and how authors react very differently to these texts according to their own socio-historical background.}, language = {en} } @misc{Gwosdek2014, author = {Gwosdek, Hedwig}, title = {Nicholas Orme. English School Exercises, 1420-1530. Studies and Texts 181. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2013, xi + 441 pp., \$ 95.00.}, series = {Anglia}, volume = {132}, journal = {Anglia}, number = {3}, issn = {1865-8938}, doi = {10.1515/ang-2014-0063}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-195318}, pages = {607-610}, year = {2014}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, language = {en} } @incollection{Heisters2023, author = {Heisters, Anne}, title = {Women as Other? - Women and Other}, series = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, booktitle = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2-59}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305875}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {59-72}, year = {2023}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, subject = {Feminismus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Himmel2021, author = {Himmel, Marie-Christin}, title = {Phonetic and phonological variability in the L1 and L2 of late bilinguals: The case of /r/ and /l/}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-23933}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-239335}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {A large body of research has shown that a late bilingual's L1 and L2 phonetic categories influence each other, yielding deviations from monolingual norms in the phonetics of both languages. Existing models of L2 sound acquisition (e.g., the Speech Learning Model; Flege, 1995, 2007) predict unified phonetic spaces which accommodate both L1 and L2 sound categories. Such connections between an L1 and an L2 are believed to lead to persistent non-nativelikeness in the L2, but also to divergence from the monolingual norm in the L1, as shown in numerous studies (e.g., Bergmann et al., 2016). In this dissertation, I focus on the differences in the sound patterns of a bilingual's languages which do not only emerge in the precise phonetic realizations of L1 sounds but also in language-specific distributional patterns that determine the realization of these sound categories in different phonetic contexts. Previous work in L1 attrition is limited to a small set of phonetic properties (especially VOT, e.g., Flege, 1987), variables beyond L2 transfer which are known to give rise to variable realizations have been neglected. Thus, little is known as to whether bilinguals' realizations of an L1 sound category in different phonetic contexts (e.g., position within a syllable) are subject to change in L1 attrition, and whether such changes arise due to long-term exposure to different distributional patterns of an equivalent L2 category. In this dissertation I address these gaps by exploring L1 attrition in the distributional and phonetic characteristics of liquids to shed light on the contribution of the L2 and the role of general phonetic and phonological variables to the processes that drive change in an L1. I investigate changes to phonetic properties and distributional patterns of rhoticity and /l/-allophony in the L1 of American-German late bilinguals, a language constellation which offers an instructive test case to investigate the causes of L1 attrition as well as the source from which changes due to L1 attrition emerge. Furthermore, changes to liquids can also shed light on the processes which drive sound change, gradience and variability due to various positional and phonetic factors (e.g., preceding vowel, syllable structure) in liquids across many native varieties of English. In particular, I explore the variable realization and distributional patterns of two sounds known to be subject to a considerable degree of gradience and variability, namely English /r/ and /l/, in American English-German late bilinguals. To that end, I present the results of a production study of 12 L2-dominant American English-German late bilinguals as well as a monolingual control group for each language. The speakers performed a variety of production tasks which were aimed to elicit the realization of (non)-rhoticity and /l/-(non-)allophony in both languages of the late bilinguals, English and German which were analyzed auditorily (/r/ only) and acoustically (/r/ and /l/). Although L1 attrition of rhotics and laterals has been investigated previously (e.g., de Leeuw, 2008; Ulbrich \& Ordin, 2014), the effect of contextual variables on L1 attrition and whether such variables also shape L1 attrition remains unexplored. The results of the auditory analyses of postvocalic /r/ revealed that the late bilinguals showed non-convergence with monolingual (non-)rhoticity in both of their languages by vocalizing postvocalic /r/ more frequently in their L1 (English) and failing to entirely suppress rhoticity in their L2 (German) leading up to a higher degree of rhoticity in their L2. While the loss of rhoticity in the bilingual's English was distributed along a spectrum of contextual constraints (e.g., type of pre-rhotic vowel and morpho-phonological environment) known to affect rhoticity in other English varieties, the non-targetlike productions of non-rhoticity (i.e., non-vocalized postvocalic /r/) in their L2, German, were not sensitive to the same contextual constraints. The acoustic analyses of the bilinguals' rhotic productions in English and German differed from the monolinguals in the acoustic correlates of rhoticity in pre-rhotic vowels where they showed reduced anticipatory F3-lowering (i.e., less /r/-colored vowels). I take my results to indicate that the bilinguals operate in two separate phonological grammars which approximate the respective L1 norm but show an increase of variability along constraints already present in each grammar. In contrast, the bilinguals' phonetic system seem shared between the two grammars. This leads to persistent L1-L2-interactions as the two grammars operate within the same phonetic space. Thus, the changes in L1 attrition are induced but not governed by the L2: Change to the L1 reflects constraints underlying the L1 as well as more general laws of phonetics and universal trajectories of language change. The lateral results revealed that just like in postvocalic /r/, the bilinguals showed non-convergence with the monolingual norm regarding the velarization of coda /l/ in both their languages. The changes to English laterals were sensitive to their positional context and more substantial for word-initial laterals than word-final laterals. Similarly, their German laterals were non-convergent with the monolinguals in two ways. Firstly, the bilinguals differed with regard to the acoustic specifications of their laterals, and secondly, the bilinguals failed to suppress the lateral allophony from their L1, leading to a non-targetlike allophonic pattern in their L2 laterals. I interpret the lateral results to lack evidence that the L1 allophonic rule was affected by the presence of an L2; nevertheless, L1 change emerged in the phonetic specifications of laterals. Furthermore, the bilinguals did not establish a nativelike allophonic pattern in their L2, leading to non-convergence in the allophonic distribution as well as the phonetic realization of German laterals. In this way, this dissertation provides evidence for L1 attrition in the distributional and the phonetic properties of liquids in the L1 of late bilinguals. In particular, the study presented in this dissertation provides evidence that L1 attrition is induced by the presence of a similar sound pattern in the L2. The pathway of attrition follows constraints not only underlyingly present in the L1 but also part of the universal laws of phonetics known to shape sound change. To explain these results, I draw from existing constraint grammars in phonological theory (such as Optimality Theory and Harmonic Grammar) to develop my Dynamic Constraints approach which allows the effects of external variables (e.g., L2 acquisition and its effect on the mind), and internal variables such as an increased likelihood of variability due to articulatory differences can be modeled using scaling factors which can interact with each other, the noise within the grammars, and the constraint weight itself. In this way, the model links previous findings on L1 attrition and its connections to diachronic and synchronic variability, offering insights into the links between the individual languages in a bilingual's mind.}, subject = {Zweisprachigkeit}, language = {en} } @article{Huettner2017, author = {Huettner, Sabrina}, title = {Nelson Pressley. American Playwriting and the Anti-Political Prejudice: Twentieth- and Twenty-First Century Perspectives. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, ix + 185 pp, \$69.99.}, series = {Journal of Contemporary Drama in English}, volume = {5}, journal = {Journal of Contemporary Drama in English}, number = {1}, issn = {2195-0164}, doi = {10.1515/jcde-2017-0019}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194210}, pages = {217-222}, year = {2017}, abstract = {No abstract available}, language = {en} } @incollection{Jetter2023, author = {Jetter, Tobias}, title = {Afterword : Engaged Scholarship in Practice; or: How to Look Back into the Future}, series = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, booktitle = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2-183}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305953}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {183-187}, year = {2023}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, subject = {Kulturwissenschaften}, language = {en} } @incollection{Jetter2023, author = {Jetter, Tobias}, title = {Introduction : Global Cultural Studies?}, series = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, booktitle = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2-1}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305815}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {1-3}, year = {2023}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, subject = {Kulturwissenschaften}, language = {en} } @incollection{JetterAckermannSnyderKoerber2023, author = {Jetter, Tobias and Ackermann, Zeno and Snyder-K{\"o}rber, MaryAnn}, title = {Acknowledgements}, series = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, booktitle = {Global Cultural Studies? Engaged Scholarship between National and Transnational Frames}, editor = {Jetter, Tobias}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-207-2-i}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305790}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {i-ii}, year = {2023}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, language = {en} } @article{Kailich2022, author = {Kailich, Franziska}, title = {The Introduction of English-induced neologisms in Spanish tweets: a case-study on covidiota}, series = {Frontiers in Communication}, volume = {7}, journal = {Frontiers in Communication}, issn = {2297-900X}, doi = {10.3389/fcomm.2022.780340}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-274064}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This paper intends to trace the introduction of an English-induced, COVID-related neologism, covidiota, into the Spanish language. The study is based on a corpus of tweets, starting in March 2020. It examines several specific features which mark the word as a new, unfamiliar item, such as different ways of graphical highlighting, for example. On the other hand, the paper aims to detect possible indicators of an integration of covidiota into the Spanish language use in the tweet corpus compiled for this case study.}, language = {en} } @misc{Karremann2014, author = {Karremann, Isabel}, title = {April London.The Cambridge Introduction to the Eighteenth-Century Novel. Cambridge Introductions to Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012, 260 pp., \$ 26.99 pb.}, series = {Anglia}, volume = {132}, journal = {Anglia}, number = {3}, issn = {1865-8938}, doi = {10.1515/ang-2014-0064}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-195307}, pages = {611-615}, year = {2014}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, language = {en} } @misc{Karremann2016, author = {Karremann, Isabel}, title = {Hans-Peter Wagner. An Introduction to British and Irish Fiction: Renaissance to Romanticism. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2014, 262 pp., 60 illustr., € 29.50.}, series = {Anglia}, volume = {134}, journal = {Anglia}, number = {4}, issn = {1865-8938}, doi = {10.1515/ang-2016-0078}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194309}, pages = {711-715}, year = {2016}, abstract = {No abstract available.}, language = {en} } @article{Kiesler2014, author = {Kiesler, Reinhard}, title = {Anja Overbeck / Wolfgang Schweickard / Harald V{\"o}lker (edd.), Lexikon, Variet{\"a}t, Philologie: Romanistische Studien. G{\"u}nter Holtus zum 65. Geburtstag, Berlin, De Gruyter, 2011, XLIV + 824 p.}, series = {Zeitschrift f{\"u}r romanische Philologie}, volume = {130}, journal = {Zeitschrift f{\"u}r romanische Philologie}, number = {4}, issn = {1865-9063}, doi = {10.1515/zrp-2014-0108}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-195505}, pages = {1165 -- 1170}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Kein Abstract verf{\"u}gbar.}, language = {en} }