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  1. The Functıons of the Invective Lexicon
    Published: 2023
    Publisher:  MISC

    Invective vocabulary has recently been of interest to linguists, so we paid attention to the semantic development of this layer of language. The article aims to investigate this layer and how this layer is formed. The formation of invective... more

     

    Invective vocabulary has recently been of interest to linguists, so we paid attention to the semantic development of this layer of language. The article aims to investigate this layer and how this layer is formed. The formation of invective vocabulary occurs mainly with the help of the following lexico-semantic methods: the transition of ordinary language into invective due to the means of linguistic expressiveness. Of particular interest is the communicative aspect of the use of invectives. Even though that many words are quite often used as abuses not only in live communication but also in many texts, this possible meaning is not always recorded in dictionaries.

     

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    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: Undetermined
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Parent title: Path of Science ; 9 ; 5 ; 1022-1027
    DDC Categories: 800
    Subjects: Literatur; Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft; Literature; rhetoric and criticism; invective; addressee; addresser; colloquialism; vulgarisms; Sprachwissenschaft; Linguistik; Science of Literature; Linguistics; Funktion; function
    Rights:

    Creative Commons - Namensnennung 4.0 ; Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0

  2. »Denn Ich ist ein Anderer«: Dereferenzialisierungsstrategien auf Produktions- und Rezeptionsebene innerhalb der sozialen Praxis Lyrik (mit einem Seitenblick auf Till Lindemann)
    Author: Zügel, Nora
    Published: 2024

    Rimbaud’s formulation in his Lettre du voyant to Paul Demeny, »Car Je est un autre,« which has become famous in German as »Denn Ich ist ein Anderer« [For I is an Other/For I is someone else] (Rimbaud 1997, 20–21) can, in its formulaic nature, be read... more

     

    Rimbaud’s formulation in his Lettre du voyant to Paul Demeny, »Car Je est un autre,« which has become famous in German as »Denn Ich ist ein Anderer« [For I is an Other/For I is someone else] (Rimbaud 1997, 20–21) can, in its formulaic nature, be read as a motto for various practices which effect a dissociation between the addressee and the author of lyric texts. In this text, these dissociation processes are referred to as practices of dereferentialization. The first thesis of this article is that an ambiguization of the addressee reference – not only by means of epitextual authorial poetological statements according to the abovementioned reasoning, but indeed from within the texts themselves – can manifest itself as a strategy in poetry production which leads to a poem becoming ambiguous, that is, allowing for more possible interpretations and as a consequence acquiring a positive quality. That dereferentialization has also proved to be a strategy of literary reception (and more specifically within the practice of interpretation) whose goal is to secure a property that is considered constitutive of poetry forms the second thesis presented here. Both theses are based on the assumption that ambiguity is an axiological value within the social practice of ›lyric poetry‹. The article concludes with a discussion of whether the reception-side dereferentialization is sometimes performed too uncritically, with a view towards Till Lindemann’s Undank und Wenn du schläfst. ; Rimbauds Formulierung in seinem Lettre du voyant an Paul Demeny, »Car Je est un autre«, die im Deutschen als »Denn Ich ist ein Anderer« (Rimbaud 1997, 20-21) berühmt geworden ist, kann in ihrer Formelhaftigkeit als Motto für verschiedene Praktiken gelesen werden, die eine Dissoziation zwischen Adressat und Autor lyrischer Texte bewirken. In diesem Text werden diese Distanzierungsprozesse als Praktiken der Dereferentialisierung bezeichnet. Die erste These dieses Artikels lautet, dass eine Ambiguisierung des Adressatenbezugs - nicht nur durch ...

     

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    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: German
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 4; 400; 8; 800
    Subjects: article; ScholarlyArticle; Published Version; lyrisches Ich; Adressant; adressantenneutral; Polyvalenz; Mehrdeutigkeit; Autonomieästhetik; Till Lindemann; lyrical I; addressee; addressee-neutral; polyvalence; ambiguity; aesthetics of autonomy
    Rights:

    creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ ; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

  3. The I and the Others. Articulations of Personality and Communication Structures in the Lyric
    Published: 2017
    Publisher:  De Gruyter

    The paper discusses articulations of personality and communication structures in the lyric: who is speaking in a poem? What is the status of the person who speaks, or the one who is spoken about? Is it the author himself who is speaking, or is it... more

     

    The paper discusses articulations of personality and communication structures in the lyric: who is speaking in a poem? What is the status of the person who speaks, or the one who is spoken about? Is it the author himself who is speaking, or is it someone else – an autonomous being, completely different and detached from the subject developed in the text? Who is addressed in and by a poem? It is made clear that conventional concepts of Stimmung (mood), Erlebnis (experience), and lyrisches Ich (the ›lyric I‹) should be set aside and the nature of lyric communication should be redetermined. For this purpose, a precise examination of the specific use of personal pronouns in poems is necessary, especially of the pronouns ›I‹, ›you‹ and ›we‹. The indistinct ›lyric I‹ should be substituted by the term ›articulated I‹. The poetic text as a whole is being structured by a superordinate entity, the Textsubjekt (›textual subject‹). Every speaking entity in a poem has a counterpart being addressed by it. Analyzing communication structures in poetry thus means first of all looking for an addressee who is constituted by the text. Only in a second step should we figure out if the address refers to the intended reader.

     

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    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 800
    Subjects: articulated I; textual subject; narrative poem; intended reader; addressee
    Rights:

    info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess