Das ungeschriebene Schicksal. Life is a Story - story.one


Book Description

Alles begann im Jahr 0589, als Tsukuyomi die Welt erblickte. Er war ein lebensfroher kleiner Elf ,bis plötzlich ein vermeintlicher Traum ihm diese Freude nahm. Seitdem kämpfe er Tag für tag mit der Angst die tief in ihm verankert war. Als wenn das nicht genug wäre, traf ihm ein schwerer Schicksalsschlag und sein Leben wandelte sich. Nach dem die Stadt Nonio den Bach hinunter ging, war er auf sich allein gestellt und kam in die Hände von einem berüchtigten Zuhälter. Von dort an erlebte er täglich Gewalt die ihn prägte. Nach Jahrelangem missbrauch, hoffte er nun endlich frei zu sein. Doch wird er es auch schaffen endlich frei zu sein?




Strafzumessung


Book Description

In September 2018 the criminal law section of the 72nd Deutscher Juristentag (DJT, “German Assembly of Jurists”) debated the question “Sentencing Guidelines vs. Free Judicial Discretion – Is German Sentencing Law in Need of Reform?” Despite the expert opinion provided by Johannes Kaspar and the accompanying scholarly commentaries, ensuing proposals for fundamental reform met with rejection. The comparative perspective was limited to the US Federal sentencing guidelines. The intention of this volume is therefore, on the one hand, to draw a more nuanced picture of Anglo-American sentencing law focusing on three legal systems (England/Wales, USA and Canada) accompanied by commentaries from a German perspective; on the other hand, we want to make the German perspective (better) known within the Anglo-American legal world by reproducing important DJT documents in English language. To ensure the widest possible distribution we opted for a bilingual open access publication.




A Woman's Prison Journal


Book Description

"In 1944, the young writer Luise Rinser - who was neither Jewish nor Communist - was denounced by a 'friend', arrested for high treason, and sent to the women's prison at Traunstein in Bavaria. This book is the diary she kept, secretly, while she awaited an almost certain death sentence. Besides being an eloquent testament to the strength of the human spirit, it is a fascinating document of prison life under the Nazis - a world which, for all its harshness, was vastly different from the forced labor camps and the death camps."--Jacket.




Antisemitism in Reader Comments


Book Description

This book examines the most frequent form of Jew-hatred: Israel-related antisemitism. After defining this hate ideology in its various manifestations and the role the internet plays in it, the author explores the question of how Israel-related antisemitism is communicated and understood through the language used by readers in below-the-line comments. Drawing on a corpus of over 6,000 comments from traditionally left-wing news outlets The Guardian and Die Zeit, the author examines both implicit and explicit comparisons made between modern-day Israel and both colonial Britain and Nazi Germany. His analyses are placed within the context of resurgent neo-nationalism in both countries, and it is argued that these instances of antisemitism perform a multi-faceted role in absolving guilt, re-writing history, and reinforcing in-group status. This book will be of interest not only to linguistics scholars, but also to academics in fields such as internet studies, Jewish studies, hate speech and antisemitism.




Popular Sovereignty and the Crisis of German Constitutional Law


Book Description

A path-breaking critical analysis of the meaning and interpretation of the German constitution in the Weimar years (1919-1933).




Technique of the drama


Book Description







Out of Revolution


Book Description

This classic, originally published in 1938, was reprinted in 1969 for a new generation by Berg Publishers. From the new introduction by Harold J. Berman: "That this book--written six decades ago--is without question an extraordinary book, a remarkable book, a fascinating book, has not saved it from relative obscurity. It is directed against conventional historiography, and for the most part the conventional historians have either ignored it or denounced it . . . [It] is a history in the best sense of the word. Although it embodies original scholarship of the highest professional quality, it is written primarily for the amateur, the person of general education, who wants to know where we came from and whither we are headed. But it is also a theory of history: how history should be understood, how historians should write about it . . .. Out of Revolution interprets modern Western history as a single 900-year period, initiated by total revolution . . . and punctuated thereafter by a series of total revolutions that broke out successively in the different European nations . . .. Rosenstock-Huessy was a prophet who, like many great prophets, failed in his own time, but whose time may now be coming."




The Women's Liberation Movement in Russia


Book Description

Richard Stites views the struggle for liberation of Russian women in the context of both nineteenth-century European feminism and twentieth-century communism. The central personalities, their vigorous exchange of ideas, the social and political events that marked the emerging ideal of emancipation--all come to life in this absorbing and dramatic account. The author's history begins with the feminist, nihilist, and populist impulses of the 1860s and 1870s, and leads to the social mobilization campaigns of the early Soviet period.




Forms of Modernity


Book Description

It's a critical cliché that Cervantes' Don Quixote is the first modern novel, but this distinction raises two fundamental questions. First, how does one define a novel? And second, what is the relationship between this genre and understandings of modernity? In Forms of Modernity, Rachel Schmidt examines how seminal theorists and philosophers have wrestled with the status of Cervantes' masterpiece as an 'exemplary novel', in turn contributing to the emergence of key concepts within genre theory. Schmidt's discussion covers the views of well-known thinkers such as Friedrich Schlegel, José Ortega y Gasset, and Mikhail Bakhtin, but also the pivotal contributions of philosophers such as Hermann Cohen and Miguel de Unamuno. These theorists' examinations of Cervantes's fictional knight errant character point to an ever-shifting boundary between the real and the virtual. Drawing from both intellectual and literary history, Forms of Modernity richly explores the development of the categories and theories that we use today to analyze and understand novels.