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University of Graz News Lesarten

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Wednesday, 30 January 2019

Lesarten

Auch Rechts- und Wirtschaftstexte lassen sich mit literaturwissenschaftlichen Methoden analysieren. Foto: pixabay

Auch Rechts- und Wirtschaftstexte lassen sich mit literaturwissenschaftlichen Methoden analysieren. Foto: pixabay

Die literaturwissenschaftliche Analyse von Rechts- und Wirtschaftstexten eröffnet neue Interpretationsmöglichkeiten

Lassen sich mit Methoden und Begrifflichkeiten der Literaturwissenschaft auch wirtschaftswissenschaftliche und rechtswissenschaftliche Texte erforschen, und wenn ja, welche neuen Erkenntnisse ergeben sich daraus? Diese Fragen beschäftigen die Romanistin Doris Pichler in ihrem Forschungsprojekt „Law, Literature and Economics. A New Interdisciplinary Approach“, gefördert vom Österreichischen Wissenschaftsfonds FWF.
„Normalerweise werden wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Schriften oder Rechtstexte nur auf der inhaltlichen Ebene untersucht. Analysiert man sie jedoch mit literaturwissenschaftlichen Methoden, lassen sich Textstrategien herausfinden, die einen anderen Blick auf den Inhalt und alternative Interpretationsmöglichkeiten eröffnen“, erklärt Doris Pichler, wie ihre Forschungen Neues zutage bringen können. So hat sie unter anderem einen Text des Ökonomen Joseph Schumpeter (1883-1950) unter die Lupe genommen und dabei entdeckt, dass der bekannte österreichische Wirtschaftswissenschafter sich häufig der Ironie bedient.

Aktuelle Forschungen zum Textbegriff aus interdisziplinärer Perspektive tauschten LinguistInnen, JuristInnen, TheologInnen und LiteraturwissenschafterInnen am 25. Jänner 2019 beim internationalen Symposium „TextVerHandlungen“ an der Universität Graz aus. Am Vortag widmete sich die vom Zentrum für Kulturwissenschaften und dem Doktoratsprogramm „Kultur – Text – Handlung“ organisierte Konferenz zeitgenössischen literarischen Texten bzw. Formen, die nicht dem klassischen Kanon angehören, wie etwa die Graphic Novel, und deren Einfluss auf die Definition von Literatur und die literaturwissenschaftliche Analyse.

Die OrganisatorInnen des Symposiums "TextVerHandlungen" (v.l.): Dimitri Smirnov, Doris Pichler, Alena Heinritz und Mario Huber. Foto: Uni Graz/Pichler
Die OrganisatorInnen des Symposiums "TextVerHandlungen" (v.l.): Dimitri Smirnov, Doris Pichler, Alena Heinritz und Mario Huber. Foto: Uni Graz/Pichler
created by Gudrun Pichler

Related news

Semester abroad without barriers: University of Graz wins award for promoting inclusion

The University of Graz has been awarded the Internationalization Award for its new inclusion initiative. Students with fewer opportunities now also receive financial support for their semester abroad outside Europe.

Fair distribution: Researchers determine just greenhouse gas budgets for all EU regions

Ten years ago, on 12 December 2015, the Paris Climate Agreement was signed at the UN Climate Conference. In order to limit global warming to well below two degrees, only a certain amount of CO2 may be emitted worldwide. While the focus was originally on national emission targets, more than 200 subnational regions and almost 300 cities have now adopted their own targets. But how many emissions are they fairly entitled to? Researchers at the University of Graz have now developed transparent criteria for fair distribution at the subnational level for the first time and determined corresponding greenhouse gas budgets for all European regions. The paper was published today in the scientific journal Nature Communications.

Chemical Christmas show at the University of Graz: An explosive evening at the Schauspielh

At the beginning of December, the University of Graz transformed the theater into a laboratory: as part of “Chemical Life,” teacher training students staged a chemical Christmas show for Styrian school classes—complete with ethanol rockets, nitrogen snow, and glowing effects. An evening designed to inspire interest in studying chemistry.

Train by train: Koralm railway accelerates exchange between the Universities

Lectures at the University of Klagenfurt in the morning, seminars at the University of Graz in the afternoon: Austria's longest tunnel and a journey time of around 45 minutes make it easy. The Koralm railway increases the speed of networking between the two university locations. The collaboration builds on existing cooperation - for example in the areas of teacher training, Slavic studies and as employers, the universities are well coordinated.

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