Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Dissertation (14)
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (8)
- Teil eines Buches (Kapitel) (2)
- Lehrmaterial (2)
- Buch (Monographie) (1)
Sprache
- Deutsch (14)
- Englisch (12)
- Französisch (1)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (27) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Englisch (3)
- Deutsch (2)
- Film (2)
- Japan (2)
- Orient (2)
- Violoncello (2)
- Akzent (1)
- American (1)
- Artificial Intelligence (1)
- Ashikaga Yoshimitsu (1)
- Ausstellung (1)
- Barock (1)
- Chinesen (1)
- Chinesisch-kanadische Literatur (1)
- Collexeme Analysis (1)
- Computation and Language (1)
- Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (1)
- Construction Grammar (1)
- Darmstadt, Gerhart (1)
- Deep learning (1)
- Definition (1)
- Diskriminierung (1)
- Dokumentarfilm (1)
- Drama (1)
- Edward Steichen (1)
- Erzähltheorie (1)
- Festschrift (1)
- Filmgeschichte (1)
- Filmographie (1)
- Filmvorführung (1)
- Fotografie (1)
- Frames / Frame-Semantik (1)
- Französisch (1)
- Fremdsprachenlernen (1)
- Fu-Jen-Universität Peking (1)
- Gender (1)
- Geschichte 1925-1951 (1)
- Geschlecht / Gender (1)
- Geschlechterrolle Motiv (1)
- Geschlechterstereotyp (1)
- Heteronormativity (1)
- Heteronormativität Motiv (1)
- Huttig, Willi (1)
- Interaktion (1)
- Interkulturalität (1)
- Intersektionalität (1)
- Intonation <Linguistik> (1)
- Japanisch (1)
- Japanology (1)
- Journalist (1)
- Kabuki (1)
- Kanada (1)
- Kanadistik (1)
- Kinematograph (1)
- Kompositum (1)
- Korpuslinguistik / Diskurs (1)
- Kriegsfotografie (1)
- Leseverstehen (1)
- Liminalität (1)
- Literatur (1)
- Luxemburgisch (1)
- Lyrik (1)
- Machine Learning (1)
- Maschinelles Lernen (1)
- Metrik (1)
- Mitgefühl (1)
- Mittelhochdeutsch (1)
- Modernity (1)
- Morphologie 〈Linguistik〉 (1)
- Motivation (1)
- Muromachi (1)
- Musik (1)
- Muster <Struktur> (1)
- Männlichkeit Motiv (1)
- Mündliche Literatur (1)
- Nationaltheater (1)
- Nationaltheater, Japanisches Theater, Theaterreform, Theaterproduktion, Japanische Kulturpolitik (1)
- No-Spiel (1)
- Nominalphrase (1)
- Palästina (1)
- Phonologie (1)
- Photographie (1)
- Porno-Rap / Rap (1)
- Premier Prix de Violoncelle (1)
- Principle of Rhythmic Alternation (1)
- Prädetermination <Linguistik> (1)
- Publikum (1)
- Québec (1)
- Rap (1)
- Reimpaarvers (1)
- Reisebericht (1)
- Reisemedien (1)
- Revue (1)
- Revuetheater (1)
- Rezension (1)
- Russisch-Ukrainischer Krieg (1)
- Sasaki Dōyo (1)
- Schami, Rafik (1)
- Shingeki (1)
- Soziale Ungleichheit (1)
- Sprache (1)
- Sprachkontakt (1)
- Sprachliche Gewalt / hate speech (1)
- Stimme (1)
- Synergetische Linguistik (1)
- Syntax (1)
- Tawada, Yōko (1)
- Textanalyse (1)
- Textlinguistik (1)
- Textsorte Rezension (1)
- Theaterbau (1)
- Theatre (1)
- Tourismus (1)
- Transfer learning (1)
- Twitter <Softwareplattform> (1)
- USA (1)
- Versroman (1)
- Visuelle Kommunikation (1)
- Western (1)
- Western Film (1)
- Wissensgraph (1)
- Yolanda von Vianden (1)
- Zeami (1)
- chinesische Kultur; katholische Kirche; Fu-Jen-Universität (1)
- corpus linguistics (1)
- gender (1)
- hybrid (1)
- littérature québécoise (1)
- multilingual (1)
- noh (1)
- performance (1)
- poetry (1)
- predeterminer adjective phrases (1)
- transcultural (1)
- transition (1)
- Ägypten (1)
Institut
- Fachbereich 2 (27) (entfernen)
In her poems, Tawada constructs liminal speaking subjects – voices from the in-between – which disrupt entrenched binary thought processes. Synthesising relevant concepts from theories of such diverse fields as lyricology, performance studies, border studies, cultural and postcolonial studies, I develop ‘voice’ and ‘in-between space’ as the frameworks to approach Tawada’s multifaceted poetic output, from which I have chosen 29 poems and two verse novels for analysis. Based on the body speaking/writing, sensuality is central to Tawada’s use of voice, whereas the in-between space of cultures and languages serves as the basis for the liminal ‘exophonic’ voices in her work. In the context of cultural alterity, Tawada focuses on the function of language, both its effect on the body and its role in subject construction, while her feminist poetry follows the general development of feminist academia from emancipation to embodiment to queer representation. Her response to and transformation of écriture féminine in her verse novels transcends the concept of the body as the basis of identity, moving to literary and linguistic, plural self-construction instead. While few poems are overtly political, the speaker’s personal and contextual involvement in issues of social conflict reveal the poems’ potential to speak of, and to, the multiply identified citizens of a globalised world, who constantly negotiate physical as well as psychological borders.
While humans find it easy to process visual information from the real world, machines struggle with this task due to the unstructured and complex nature of the information. Computer vision (CV) is the approach of artificial intelligence that attempts to automatically analyze, interpret, and extract such information. Recent CV approaches mainly use deep learning (DL) due to its very high accuracy. DL extracts useful features from unstructured images in a training dataset to use them for specific real-world tasks. However, DL requires a large number of parameters, computational power, and meaningful training data, which can be noisy, sparse, and incomplete for specific domains. Furthermore, DL tends to learn correlations from the training data that do not occur in reality, making DNNs poorly generalizable and error-prone.
Therefore, the field of visual transfer learning is seeking methods that are less dependent on training data and are thus more applicable in the constantly changing world. One idea is to enrich DL with prior knowledge. Knowledge graphs (KG) serve as a powerful tool for this purpose because they can formalize and organize prior knowledge based on an underlying ontological schema. They contain symbolic operations such as logic, rules, and reasoning, and can be created, adapted, and interpreted by domain experts. Due to the abstraction potential of symbols, KGs provide good prerequisites for generalizing their knowledge. To take advantage of the generalization properties of KG and the ability of DL to learn from large-scale unstructured data, attempts have long been made to combine explicit graph and implicit vector representations. However, with the recent development of knowledge graph embedding methods, where a graph is transferred into a vector space, new perspectives for a combination in vector space are opening up.
In this work, we attempt to combine prior knowledge from a KG with DL to improve visual transfer learning using the following steps: First, we explore the potential benefits of using prior knowledge encoded in a KG for DL-based visual transfer learning. Second, we investigate approaches that already combine KG and DL and create a categorization based on their general idea of knowledge integration. Third, we propose a novel method for the specific category of using the knowledge graph as a trainer, where a DNN is trained to adapt to a representation given by prior knowledge of a KG. Fourth, we extend the proposed method by extracting relevant context in the form of a subgraph of the KG to investigate the relationship between prior knowledge and performance on a specific CV task. In summary, this work provides deep insights into the combination of KG and DL, with the goal of making DL approaches more generalizable, more efficient, and more interpretable through prior knowledge.
Die Untersuchung verbindet Methoden der Korpuslinguistik und des close readings, um an einem repräsentativen Einzeltext mittlerer Länge das Verhältnis der syntaktischen und metrischen Ebene im mittelhochdeutschen Reimpaarvers zu untersuchen. Herausgearbeitet werden regelmäßig wiederkehrende Muster, die beide Ebenen stets gleich aufeinander abbilden. Diese Regelmäßigkeiten lassen sich aus den Lautstrukturen des mhd. Wortschatzes, den syntaktischen Bauplänen der Phrasen und Sätze, schließlich den Erfordernissen des metrischen Schemas erklären. Der häufig zur Erklärung herangezogene Reimzwang erweist sich bei näherer Betrachtung als eher sekundärer Einfluss auf die syntaktische Struktur. Neben typischen „Normalfällen“ bei denen sich statistisch häufige Betonungsmuster der Wörter, in üblichen, einfachen Satzstellungsmustern in immer gleicher Weise problemlos in den Reimpaarvers integrieren lassen, können auch wiederkehrende Abweichungsvarianten erklärt und beschrieben werden. Die festgestellten Regularitäten sind nur zu einem kleinen Teil und in wenigen Fällen deterministisch, es lässt sich jedoch, um die statistischen Auffälligkeiten zu begründen, zeigen, welche Vorteile sich aus bestimmten Varianten ergeben und welche Schwierigkeiten bei anderen entstehen, wie sich eine Variante durch eine andere ersetzen lässt. Beschrieben wird so der Gestaltungsraum des Dichters und die von ihm gewählten Lösungen. Indirekt ergibt sich zugleich ein Negativbild der Syntax, die den Zwängen des metrischen Schemas nicht unterworfen ist.
Three Kinds of Rising-Falling Contours in German wh-Questions: Evidence From Form and Function
(2022)
The intonational realization of utterances is generally characterized by regional as well as inter- and intra-speaker variability in f0. Category boundaries thus remain “fuzzy” and it is non-trivial how the (continuous) acoustic space maps onto (discrete) pitch accent categories. We focus on three types of rising-falling contours, which differ in the alignment of L(ow) and H(igh) tones with respect to the stressed syllable. Most of the intonational systems on German have described two rising accent categories, e.g., L+H* and L*+H in the German ToBI system. L+H* has a high-pitched stressed syllable and a low leading tone aligned in the pre-tonic syllable; L*+H a low-pitched stressed syllable and a high trailing tone in the post-tonic syllable. There are indications for the existence of a third category which lies between these two categories, with both L and H aligned within the stressed syllable, henceforth termed (LH)*. In the present paper, we empirically investigate the distinctiveness of three rising-falling contours [L+H*, (LH)*, and L*+H, all with a subsequent low boundary tone] in German wh-questions. We employ an approach that addresses both the form and the function of the contours, also taking regional variation into account. In Experiment 1 (form), we used a delayed imitation paradigm to test whether Northern and Southern German speakers can imitate the three rising-falling contours in wh-questions as distinct contours. In Experiment 2 (function), we used a free association task to investigate whether listeners interpret the pragmatic meaning of the three contours differently. Imitation results showed that German speakers—both from the North and the South—reproduced the three contours. There was a small but significant effect of regional variety such that contours produced by speakers from the North were slightly more distinct than those by speakers from the South. In the association task, listeners from both varieties attributed distinct meanings to the (LH)* accent as opposed to the two ToBI accents L+H* and L*+H. Combined evidence from form and function suggests that three distinct contours can be found in the acoustic and perceptual space of German rising-falling contours.
This dissertation details how Zeami (ca. 1363 - ca.1443) understood his adoption of the heavenly woman dance within the historical conditions of the Muromachi period. He adopted the dance based on performances by the Ōmi troupe player Inuō in order to expand his own troupe’s repertoire to include a divinely powerful, feminine character. In the first chapter, I show how Zeami, informed by his success as a sexualized child in the service of the political elite (chigo), understood the relationship between performer and audience in gendered terms. In his treatises, he describes how a player must create a complementary relationship between patron and performer (feminine/masculine or yin/yang) that escalates to an ecstasy of successful communication between the two poles, resembling sexual union. Next, I look at how Zeami perceived Inuō’s relationships with patrons, the daimyo Sasaki Dōyo in chapter two and shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu in chapter three. Inuō was influenced by Dōyo’s masculine penchant for powerful, awe-inspiring art, but Zeami also recognized that Inuō was able to complement Dōyo’s masculinity with feminine elegance (kakari and yūgen). In his relationship with Yoshimitsu, Inuō used the performance of subversion, both in his public persona and in the aesthetic of his performances, to maintain a rebellious reputation appropriate within the climate of conflict among the martial elite. His play “Aoi no ue” draws on the aristocratic literary tradition of the Genji monogatari, giving Yoshimitsu the role of Prince Genji and confronting him with the consequences of betrayal in the form of a demonic, because jilted, Lady Rokujō. This performance challenged Zeami’s early notion that the extreme masculinity of demons and elegant femininity as exemplified by the aristocracy must be kept separate in character creation. In the fourth chapter, I show how Zeami also combined dominance (masculinity) and submission (femininity) in the corporal capacity of a single player when he adopted the heavenly woman dance. The heavenly woman dance thus complemented not only the masculinity of his male patrons with femininity but also the political power of his patrons with another dominant power, which plays featuring the heavenly woman dance label divine rather than masculine.
The present thesis is devoted to a construction which defies generalisations about the prototypical English noun phrase (NP) to such an extent that it has been termed the Big Mess Construction (Berman 1974). As illustrated by the examples in (1) and (2), the NPs under study involve premodifying adjective phrases (APs) which precede the determiner (always realised in the form of the indefinite article a(n)) rather than following it.
(1) NoS had not been hijacked – that was too strong a word. (BNC: CHU 1766)
(2) He was prepared for a battle if the porter turned out to be as difficult a customer as his wife. (BNC: CJX 1755)
Previous research on the construction is largely limited to contributions from the realms of theoretical syntax and a number of cursory accounts in reference grammars. No comprehensive investigation of its realisations and uses has as yet been conducted. My thesis fills this gap by means of an exhaustive analysis of the construction on the basis of authentic language data retrieved from the British National Corpus (BNC). The corpus-based approach allows me to examine not only the possible but also the most typical uses of the construction. Moreover, while previous work has almost exclusively focused on the formal realisations of the construction, I investigate both its forms and functions.
It is demonstrated that, while the construction is remarkably flexible as concerns its possible realisations, its use is governed by probabilistic constraints. For example, some items occur much more frequently inside the degree item slot than others (as, too and so stand out for their particularly high frequency). Contrary to what is assumed in most previous descriptions, the slot is not restricted in its realisation to a fixed number of items. Rather than representing a specialised structure, the construction is furthermore shown to be distributed over a wide range of possible text types and syntactic functions. On the other hand, it is found to be much less typical of spontaneous conversation than of written language; Big Mess NPs further display a strong preference for the function of subject complement. Investigations of the internal structural complexity of the construction indicate that its obligatory components can optionally be enriched by a remarkably wide range of optional (if infrequent) elements. In an additional analysis of the realisations of the obligatory but lexically variable slots (head noun and head of AP), the construction is highlighted to represent a productive pattern. With the help of the methods of Collexeme Analysis (Stefanowitsch and Gries 2003) and Co-varying Collexeme Analysis (Gries and Stefanowitsch 2004b, Stefanowitsch and Gries 2005), the two slots are, however, revealed to be strongly associated with general nouns and ‘evaluative’ and ‘dimension’ adjectives, respectively. On the basis of an inspection of the most typical adjective-noun combinations, I identify the prototypical semantics of the Big Mess Construction.
The analyses of the constructional functions centre on two distinct functional areas. First, I investigate Bolinger’s (1972) hypothesis that the construction fulfils functions in line with the Principle of Rhythmic Alternation (e.g. Selkirk 1984: 11, Schlüter 2005). It is established that rhythmic preferences co-determine the use of the construction to some extent, but that they clearly do not suffice to explain the phenomenon under study. In a next step, the discourse-pragmatic functions of the construction are scrutinised. Big Mess NPs are demonstrated to perform distinct information-structural functions in that the non-canonical position of the AP serves to highlight focal information (compare De Mönnink 2000: 134-35). Additionally, the construction is shown to place emphasis on acts of evaluation. I conclude the construction to represent a contrastive focus construction.
My investigations of the formal and functional characteristics of Big Mess NPs each include analyses which compare individual versions of the construction to one another (e.g. the As Big a Mess, Too Big a Mess and So Big a Mess Constructions). It is revealed that the versions are united by a shared core of properties while differing from one another at more abstract levels of description. The question of the status of the constructional versions as separate constructions further receives special emphasis as part of a discussion in which I integrate my results into the framework of usage-based Construction Grammar (e.g. Goldberg 1995, 2006).
Stress position in English words is well-known to correlate with both their morphological properties and their phonological organisation in terms of non-segmental, prosodic categories like syllable structure. While two generalisations capturing this correlation, directionality and stratification, are well established, the exact nature of the interaction of phonological and morphological factors in English stress assignment is a much debated issue in the literature. The present study investigates if and how directionality and stratification effects in English can be learned by means of Naive Discriminative Learning, a computational model that is trained using error-driven learning and that does not make any a-priori assumptions about the higher-level phonological organisation and morphological structure of words. Based on a series of simulation studies we show that neither directionality nor stratification need to be stipulated as a-priori properties of words or constraints in the lexicon. Stress can be learned solely on the basis of very flat word representations. Morphological stratification emerges as an effect of the model learning that informativity with regard to stress position is unevenly distributed across all trigrams constituting a word. Morphological affix classes like stress-preserving and stress-shifting affixes are, hence, not predefined classes but sets of trigrams that have similar informativity values with regard to stress position. Directionality, by contrast, emerges as spurious in our simulations; no syllable counting or recourse to abstract prosodic representations seems to be necessary to learn stress position in English.
This thesis discusses revue as a significantly inter-cultural genre in the history of global theatre. During the ‘modernisation’ period in Europe, America and Japan, most major urban cities experienced a boom in revue venues and performances. Few studies about revue have yet been done in theatre studies or in urban cultural studies. My thesis will attempt to reevaluate and redefine revue as a highly intercultural theatre genre by using the concept of liminality. In other words, the aim is to examine revue as a genre built on ‘modern composition of betweenness’, bridging seemingly opposing elements, such as the foreign and the domestic, the classic and the innovative, the traditional and the modern, the professional and the amateur, high and low culture, and the feminine and the masculine. The goal is to regard revue as a liminal genre constructed amidst the negotiations between these binaries, existing in a state of constant flux.
The purpose of this approach is to capture revue as a transitory phenomena in five dimensions: conceptual, spatial, temporal, categorical and physical. Over the course of six chapters, this
inter-disciplinary discussion will reveal the reasons why and the ways by which revue came to establish its prominent position in the Japanese theatre industry. The whole structure is also an attempt to provide plausible ways to apply sociological considerations to theatre studies.