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Ukraine's Search for Justice in the Shadow of the Donbas Conflict

Igor Lyubashenko

Should we punish wrongdoers? Should we take care of the ones who suffered from wrongdoings? Although we may believe answers to these questions are obvious, they become less so when similar questions are asked under exceptional circumstances, such as armed conflicts. These answers may decide about the continuation of hostilities or their end. The stakes are high, while we can hardly ignore the need to deal with the consequences of violence generated by a conflict. This book discusses the dilemmas and challenges associated with the provision of justice in the context of the armed conflict in Ukrainian Donbas in 2014–2019.

ENOTRADULENGUA

Группа авторов

Bajo el título de Enotradulengua. Vino, lengua y traducción, se recogen en este libro 18 trabajos elaborados por integrantes del GIRTraduvino y por otros investigadores de España y de fuera, entre los que se encuentran los ya habi-tuales colaboradores, como son Cristinane Nord y Pierre Lerat. La temática de este libro versa sobre la traducción, las ontologías, la historia del conocimiento enológico, la lengua de la vid y el vino, el enoturismo y sobre varios de los géneros más característicos del ámbito: las etiquetas, las notas de cata y el anuncio impreso. También incluye un novedoso trabajo sobre la traducción de las metáforas de las notas de cata a la lengua de signos española. La lengua de la vid y el vino se aborda desde la diacronía, la sincronía y la dialectología.

Ortega y la Escuela de Marburgo

Dorota Leszczyna

El libro analiza los orígenes kantianos de la filosofía de Ortega desde su etapa inicial hasta las más tardías. Ortega descubre la filosofía de Kant cuando era un estudiante universitario, en Bilbao y Madrid, a través de los pocos trabajos sobre Kant y las traducciones de sus obras que entonces existían en España. Tras una primera lectura, y tras descubrir la filosofía germana, decide ampliar sus conocimientos en Alemania. Este viaje está influido también por las circunstancias de la España de la época: la degeneración intelectual y espiritual del país, la aversión por la ciencia y el desprecio por las ideas. En la filosofía alemana, especialmente en la de Kant, permanece la identidad de la filosofía y su carácter científico. Ortega estudió a Kant en Leipzig, Berlín y Marburgo, con grandes especialistas en su pensamiento como Wundt, Simmel, Riehl, Cohen y Natorp. Sin embargo, la ciudad más importante para él no fue ni Leipzig ni Berlín, sino la gótica Marburgo, situada en las orillas del río Lahn, a la que denomina en sus memorias «fuerte neokantiano» y «ciudadela neokantiana», recordando la filosofía que imperaba en su universidad. El hermetismo de la escuela kantiana marburguesa tenía para Ortega una doble vertiente: era, al mismo tiempo, tanto «su hogar y el aire con el que respiraba» como una «cárcel», era, en definitiva, «una adquisición eterna que había queconservar para poder ser otra cosa más allá».

Travelling Concepts: New Fictionality Studies

Группа авторов

This volume is co-edited by the director of the Freiburg graduate school «Factual and Fictional Narration» (GRK 1767, Freiburg/Germany) and the director of the Aarhus Centre for Fictionality Studies (University of Aarhus, DK). The collection of essays re-examines the much discussed fact―fiction distinction in light of the current burgeoning of research on fictionality. It provides a forum for ongoing work on fictionality from France, Germany and Denmark and Sweden. By placing discussions of the notion of fictionality in one volume, the editors hope to initiate exchange between the different traditions represented in the essays und to help the task of translating the available concepts and terminologies so they can travel between different models and theoretical frameworks.

Tertium Datur

Beniamino Fortis

In his essay Das neue Denken (1925), Franz Rosenzweig warns against the «danger of understanding the new thinking in the sense, or rather the nonsense, of ‘irrational’ tendencies such as, for example, the ‘philosophy of life.’ Everyone clever enough to have steered clear of the jaws of the idealistic Charybdis seems nowadays to be drawn into the dark whirlpool of this Scylla». The Homeric metaphor of Scylla and Charybdis provides the general guidelines Rosenzweig seems to stick to in developing his ‘new thinking.’ Not only does it avoid the dangers of idealism and irrationalism charting a third way between them, but it also takes shape as a combination of philosophy and Jewish thought – a combination irreducible to each of its terms, and thus representing a tertium datur beyond them.

Innovations- und Wissensmanagement in der Praxis: Konzepte, Forschungsergebnisse und Fallstudien

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Die Schriftenreihe Innovatives Wissensmanagement stellt der Wissenschaft sowie der Wirtschaftspraxis aktuelle Forschungsergebnisse, innovative Lösungsansätze sowie Fallstudien in der Schnittmenge der Disziplinen Innovations- und Wissensmanagement zur Verfügung.

Poesía y traducción en el siglo xix hispánico

Группа авторов

Desde distintas perspectivas críticas este libro analiza aspectos específicos de la traducción poética, así como los elementos interculturales de la traducción y la recepción de la poesía en el siglo XIX. Los exotismos literarios, la influencia del haiku, los problemas traductológicos al chino, la teleología de la traducción poética indígena mexicana, la recepción y traducción de Rosalía de Castro en Italia y las traducciones en prensa de Giosuè Carducci, son, junto con la atención prestada a la labor traductológica de Marcelino Menéndez Pelayo, Teodoro Llorent, Enrique Díez-Canedo y Fernando Fortún, Guillermo Belmonte Müller, José Zorrilla, Juan Valera y la visión traductológica de Longfellow, los exhaustivos trabajos presentados en este libro.

Ruralism and Literature in Romania

Группа авторов

Ruralism and Literature in Romania proposes a series of academic studies of rural literature and cultural portrayals of peasantry. The topics range from re-readings of canonical works to ideological readings of modern Romanian literature, rural novels of the Romanian socialist realism and post-communist literary trends centred around rural life. The three sections of the volume, «The Novel,» «Literary Criticism and Social Action,» and «Poetry» focus on the intervention of the nineteenth and twentieth-century cultural elites in the discussions of peasantry, on the role of ideology in portraying the peasant during the interwar period and postwar literature, and on off-centre topics such as zoopoetics and artificial intelligence in the rural literature.

The Lexis of the Bay of Kotor: The Northwestern and Southeastern Area

Sanja Crnogorac

The book examines the complex lexis of the northwestern and southeastern Bay of Kotor, Montenegro. The author analyzed loanwords which arrived by the influence of those who settled in the Bay (Venetians, Austro-Hungarians, Turks, Spaniards, and French). They were domesticated and spread to the continental part of Montenegro, a fact indicative of the level of linguistic integration. The analysis of the corpus was performed from phonological, morphological, etymological, accentual, phraseological, semantical, onomastic, lexical, and lexicographical perspectives. The principal intent is not only to present the infiltration of loanwords and changes in loans, but also of the variety of linguistic influences in the Bay, as well as to offer a dictionary of the most frequent Latinisms found in the Bay.

Little Hill

Alli Warren

Award-winning poet explores new formal terrain in seven long poems against the violence of the present political moment. "[Warren] has begun writing longer poems, putting her stamp on a running notational mode whose other practitioners include Stephanie Young, Anselm Berrigan, and Jacqueline Waters. I think you can hear the durational projects, the self-conscious day-scores, of Bernadette Mayer and of Lewis Warsh farther back in the tradition."— Brian Blanchfield , pen.org The third full-length collection from Bay Area poet Alli Warren, Little Hill comprises seven long poems written with propulsive prosody in a daybook fashion, examining our present, politically charged moment. These poems are at once energetic and contemplative, intimate and direct, as Warren focuses her attention on capitalism, gender, love, inequality, and resistance. Despite the dystopian now, Warren finds promise in the smallest human instances of tenderness, ecological connection, and political solidarity. Little Hill is about learning to live and love in the 21st century while not shying away from all there is to struggle against. Praise for Little Hill : "In Little Hill Alli Warren’s principle method is articulation of exquisite units of speech (thought) that, maintaining separation, are capable of connection. The line might be a sentence or a part of one … I mean a delicious sense of grammatical distinctness is maintained. The poet, also a lone unit, seems to exist less in relation than as that lone one, condemning this hard world with its villain work and elusive hierarchies. The language is precise, lush, unexpected and often thrilling. Articulation would seem to be the true other, or maybe nature is. The book is gift more than condemnation, though as the latter it’s unsparing. Still, it’s a gift."— Alice Notley , author of For the Ride and Benediction "The number of gasps and everything else gets lost in the concentration of Little Hill . Alli Warren keeps company with those rare poets whose every new book is their best. 'This is an old machine with a pulley / It makes music work,' Warren writes, reworking the ancient technology of poetry to a shine! Dear Poet, thank you for the wow WOW wowing!"— CAConrad , author of While Standing in Line for Death "Reading Alli Warren’s Little Hill , I find it incredible that amidst the relentless circulation of capital and commodities—and despite attempts to make all life yield to the logics of extraction, work, accumulation, and the entrepreneurial self—a remainder is created, that of poetry. Little Hill embodies a poetics of radical uncertainty, one that attends to its horrific condition of possibility and is produced through the unmooring catastrophes that define our present moment: the destruction of the earth, mass imprisonment, late-capitalism—the litany does not end there. 'I saw the death of the earth in a child’s toy,' she writes. Everywhere the speaker looks there is 'congealed shit, sometimes on sale.' Yet yearning, even as it is raised tentatively, is not crushed. In and against it all, a question is raised—the question of what it means to love in times of terror."— Jackie Wang , author of Carceral Capitalism