Browsing Foreign Languages by Author "van Ryneveld, Hannelore"
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van Ryneveld, Hannelore; Mentzner, Martina (Association of German Studies (SAGV), 2010)[more][less]
Abstract: The current challenges facing the teaching of German as a foreign language at the University of the Western Cape are outlined. The article includes a brief historical overview and proposes research perspectives for the future. Description: eDUSA is the electronic journal of Deutschunterricht in Südafrika. More information is available from the Assoc. of German Studies website at http://www.sagv.org.za URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10566/191 Files in this item: 1
vanRyneveldFachDeutsch2010.pdf (57.60Kb) -
van Ryneveld, Hannelore (Peter Lang, 2008)[more][less]
Abstract: José Oliver is a multilingual poet of Andalusian descent who writes poetry in German. His first poetry was published in the mid-eighties and his writings were seen as part of migrant literature (also referred to in the seventies as guestworker literature). He has however moved beyond those boundaries and has written himself into („eingeschrieben”) the German language and his poetry is characterised by a breaking- up („auf-brechen”) of the language and thereby creating sound and word structures which strip away the common usage in an attempt to regain the original meanings of words.The interview with José Oliver was conducted in February 2005 in Hausach in the Black Forest. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10566/207 Files in this item: 1
VanRyneveldImGesprach2008.pdf (538.8Kb) -
van Ryneveld, Hannelore (Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa, 2006)[more][less]
Abstract: In 1987 José F. A. Oliver published his first poetry volume Auf-Bruch in Germany. His standing as a German-speaking poet from Spanish-Andalusian stock was linked to the Gastarbeiterliteratur, or migrant worker literature in Germany, a literature that writes from the margins of both the literary and economic world of the Federal Republic of Germany. Developments within Oliver's oeuvre over the past twenty years, how ever, indicate a movement away from the literary periphery into main-stream German literature. This article explores these dynamics, using José F. A. Oliver's writings to illustrate this conjecture. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10566/180 Files in this item: 1
vanRyneveldOliver2006.pdf (204.2Kb)
Now showing items 1-3 of 3