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Der Rhein: Poetik des Stroms zwischen Elementarisierung und Domestikation
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Alexander Honold
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
15. Dezember 2008
Abstract
In the early 19th century, German poets start to conceive of the Rhine river in a significant new way. The water appears as a poetic resource and as a dynamic force of industrial production at the same time. In Hölderlin and Brentano, the Rhine is attributed a twofold quality, whereas the water seems to evoke individuality (kairos) and connectivity (cycle). In poetic terms, the river's domestication by means of hydro-engineering leads to an even more radical concept of elementary savageness, concluding in creations of a so-called new mythology like the famous ‘Loreley’.
Online erschienen: 2008-12-15
Erschienen im Druck: 2008-December
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- The Poetics of Geography in English-Canadian Literature
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- Eingegangene Schriften
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Introduction
- Literature and the New Cultural Geography
- America/Deserta: Postmodernism and the Poetics of Space
- Postcolonialism and the Politics of Space: Towards a Postcolonial Analysis of Material Spatial Practices
- Literature, Travel and Geography: French Orientations
- Writing English Landscape History
- Placing Stories, Performing Places: Spatiality in Joyce and Austen
- Der Rhein: Poetik des Stroms zwischen Elementarisierung und Domestikation
- The Poetics of Geography in English-Canadian Literature
- Fated Landscape: Choropoetic Practice in Don DeLillo's Underworld
- The Traps: Bukowski as Interpreter of Cornered Lives
- Alexander Onysko, Anglicisms in German: Borrowing, Lexical Productivity, and Written Codeswitching
- Sabine Fiedler, English Phraseology: A Coursebook
- A History of the English Language, ed. Richard Hogg & David Denison; The Oxford History of English, ed. Lynda Mugglestone
- The Celtic Englishes IV: The Interface between English and the Celtic Languages, ed. Hildegard L. C. Tristram
- Innovation and Tradition in the Writings of the Venerable Bede, ed. Scott DeGregorio
- Wendy Scase, Literature and Complaint in England, 1272–1553
- Sources of the Boece, ed. Tim William Machan with the assistance of A. J. Minnis
- The ‘Exhortation’ from Disce Mori. Edited from Oxford, Jesus College, MS 39, ed. E. A. Jones
- Jane Griffiths, John Skelton and Poetic Authority: Defining the Liberty to Speak
- Eingegangene Schriften