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Kind, Kino und Kinderliteratur eine Untersuchung zum Medienumbruch in der Kinderkultur der Kaiserzeit und der Weimarer RepublikSchmerling, Alice Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
Köln, Univ., Diss., 2007
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Phantastik und Realismus in Kinder- und Jugendliteratur nach 1945Maier, Erika. January 2007 (has links)
Konstanz, Univ., Magisterarbeit, 2007.
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„Alles was mit Nachdenken verbunden ist“: Pünktchen und Anton in Buch und Film. Ein Medienvergleich der „Nachdenkereien“ bei Erich Kästner, Thomas Engel und Caroline LinkSchulz, Nina 15 August 2007 (has links)
Erich Kästner’s novel for children, Pünktchen und Anton (1931), has been twice adapted for the screen, first in 1953 by Thomas Engel and then again in 1999 by Caroline Link. Both directors were also responsible for the screenplays which set the action in the present day. Kästner’s novel features 16 so-called “Nachdenkereien,” short passages following each chapter that outline moral principles, virtues, and values. This pedagogical content provides the readers with guidelines for the betterment of their own characters. After considering the genre of children’s literature as well as Erich Kästner’s reputation as an author of children’s books, the thesis focuses on the cinematic adaptation of these “Nachdenkereien.” Each version of Pünktchen und Anton is analyzed in turn with special attention paid to the representation of the moral lessons found in the “Nachdenkereien.”
This analysis reveals that the film directors, being unable to reproduce cinematically the specific literary form of Kästner’s “Nachdenkereien,” transmit the content of these lessons by means of plot. Whereas Kästner uses a first-person narrator to explain the “Nachdenkereien” to young readers, the filmmakers introduce events that are not found in Kästner’s novel but which nevertheless convey the ethics present in the “Nachdenkereien.” Engel and Link therefore avoid the use of on- or off-screen narration in favour of incorporating the moral warnings into the plot. Other elements of the films, for example setting and characterization, aid in the transmittal of the story’s ethical messages. The movies leave it to their audiences to extract the moral guidelines contained in the stories, a departure from Kästner’s more direct entreaties to the readers. In either case, the readers/viewers of the stories are ultimately left with the final decision whether to heed the moral imperative presented.
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„Alles was mit Nachdenken verbunden ist“: Pünktchen und Anton in Buch und Film. Ein Medienvergleich der „Nachdenkereien“ bei Erich Kästner, Thomas Engel und Caroline LinkSchulz, Nina 15 August 2007 (has links)
Erich Kästner’s novel for children, Pünktchen und Anton (1931), has been twice adapted for the screen, first in 1953 by Thomas Engel and then again in 1999 by Caroline Link. Both directors were also responsible for the screenplays which set the action in the present day. Kästner’s novel features 16 so-called “Nachdenkereien,” short passages following each chapter that outline moral principles, virtues, and values. This pedagogical content provides the readers with guidelines for the betterment of their own characters. After considering the genre of children’s literature as well as Erich Kästner’s reputation as an author of children’s books, the thesis focuses on the cinematic adaptation of these “Nachdenkereien.” Each version of Pünktchen und Anton is analyzed in turn with special attention paid to the representation of the moral lessons found in the “Nachdenkereien.”
This analysis reveals that the film directors, being unable to reproduce cinematically the specific literary form of Kästner’s “Nachdenkereien,” transmit the content of these lessons by means of plot. Whereas Kästner uses a first-person narrator to explain the “Nachdenkereien” to young readers, the filmmakers introduce events that are not found in Kästner’s novel but which nevertheless convey the ethics present in the “Nachdenkereien.” Engel and Link therefore avoid the use of on- or off-screen narration in favour of incorporating the moral warnings into the plot. Other elements of the films, for example setting and characterization, aid in the transmittal of the story’s ethical messages. The movies leave it to their audiences to extract the moral guidelines contained in the stories, a departure from Kästner’s more direct entreaties to the readers. In either case, the readers/viewers of the stories are ultimately left with the final decision whether to heed the moral imperative presented.
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Englischsprachige Kinderbücher "Kinderkram" oder anspruchsvolle Literatur auch für Erwachsene? /Oppermann, Eva. January 2005 (has links)
Universiẗat, Diss., 2005--Kassel. / Download lizenzpflichtig.
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Die Moral der Geschicht' - gibt es nicht über die ethischen und moralischen Themen in der Kinderliteratur und wie Kinder über diese denkenGillebeert, Dominique Unknown Date (has links) (PDF)
Darmstadt, Techn. Univ., Diss., 2007
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Der Orient in der deutschen Kinder- und Jugendliteratur Fallstudien aus drei JahrhundertenHodaie, Nazli January 2006 (has links)
Zugl.: München, Univ., Diss., 2006
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Comparative children's literature /O'Sullivan, Emer. January 2009 (has links)
Vollst. zugl.: Habil.-Schr. u.d.T.: Kinderliterarische Komparatistik. / Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Von Heinzelmännchen, Cowboys und tapferen Soldaten : die Vielfalt der österreichischen Kinder- und Jugendliteratur von 1938 bis 1945 /Marrara, Pia. January 2008 (has links)
Wien, Univ., Dipl.-Arb., 2008.
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Menschenbilder in der Kinder- und Jugendliteratur eine Inhaltsanalyse aus psychologisch-sonderpädagogischer Sicht /Reese, Ingeborg. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Hannover, Universiẗat, Diss., 2006.
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