Results 31 to 40 of about 16,507 (180)

Le Roi Barbe d’Ours, petit théâtre de papier.

open access: yesStrenae, 2013
How and why illustrate fairy tales? As we will see in this article, Maurice Sendak offers several answers to this question.In Juniper Tree and Other Tales from Grimm, he chose to limit himself to one illustration per story. This illustration, capturing a
Isabelle Nières-Chevrel
doaj   +1 more source

Die Austreibung der Schrift durch die Schrift : Zur philologisch-historischen Reflexion von Mündlichkeit nach 1800 am Beispiel der Grimmschen Kinder- und Hausmärchen [PDF]

open access: yes, 2014
The article discusses a paradoxical gesture which is significant for the birth of modern philology and the widespread fascination with folk poetry in the nineteenth century. Scholars often consider the oral nature of these traditions as crucial for their
Dehrmann, Mark-Georg
core   +2 more sources

Children’s and Household Tales: from Oral Tradition to Children’s Literature [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
Os irmãos Grimm (Alemanha- séc.XIX) foram dos mais prolíferos escritores de histórias de potencial receção Infanto-juvenil, tornando imortais contos como: “Capuchinho Vermelho”, “A cabra e os sete cabritinhos”, “A bela Adormecida” ou “Gata Borralheira ...
Guerreiro, Carla A.
core   +5 more sources

Les recueils illustrés des contes des Grimm : entre reprise et création originale [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
This article takes stock of the  collections of Jacob and Wilhem Grimm's tales illustrated and published in French between the  2000 and 2020. French publishers seem   reluctant to take the risk of commissioning new illustrations from contemporary ...
François, Cyrille
core   +2 more sources

From Palace to House. The Changing Domestic Settings of Fairy-tales

open access: yesEncyclopaideia, 2017
Research into the nature of the landscapes in fairy-tales is not a new field. The representations of space in fairy-tales have been investigated in many studies from different perspectives.
Marnie Campagnaro
doaj   +1 more source

The ugly in fine arts. The sensory nature of terror in the tales of the Brothers Grimm [PDF]

open access: yes, 2017
The author, inspired by philosophical aesthetic reflection, presents one of the aesthetic qualities: ugliness. Based on the assumption that “Grimms’ Fairy Tales” directly reach the realm of the unconscious, utilising towards that end not only symbolic ...
Szwajkowska, Anita
core   +2 more sources

Does compliance with the global anticorruption regime require the use of artificial intelligence?

open access: yesAmerican Business Law Journal, Volume 62, Issue 3, Page 145-164, Fall 2025.
Abstract Business firms constantly hear that artificial intelligence has changed the world and that they must either utilize artificial intelligence or fall behind. By extension, this would be true of regulatory compliance as well as operations. This article challenges the mantra of artificial intelligence as a ubiquitous agent of change.
Philip M. Nichols
wiley   +1 more source

Thank You to Our Peer Reviewers in 2023 [PDF]

open access: yesHealth Expect
Health Expectations, Volume 27, Issue 6, December 2024.
europepmc   +2 more sources

Between Translanguaging and Gender‐Justice: Teaching Kim de l'Horizon's Blutbuch in the Tertiary German Classroom

open access: yesDie Unterrichtspraxis/Teaching German, Volume 58, Issue 2, Page 186-195, Fall 2025.
ABSTRACT This article examines how tertiary language learners of German engaged with the novel Blutbuch (2022) by Swiss author Kim de l'Horizon. Celebrated as the first nonbinary novel in German literature, excerpts of this autofictional text were taught in a 3‐week unit, which was part of a semester‐long German course targeted at university students ...
Birgit Lang
wiley   +1 more source

HUMAN RIGHTS IN A GLOBAL WORLD: RACIALISATION AND RELIGION IN RATHLEF'S DIE MOHRINN ZU HAMBURG AND ZIEGLER'S DIE MOHRINN1

open access: yesGerman Life and Letters, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 49-75, January 2025.
Abstract In Rathlef's and Ziegler's plays the need for human rights becomes tangible through the seemingly Other, disrupting the quotidian order of the (bourgeois) realm. The plays explore racial premises placed in close relationship with intertextual correlates, in particular bourgeois tragedies where the female protagonists embody complex moral ...
Claudia Nitschke
wiley   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy