Sie haben keine Artikel im Warenkorb.
Alte Sachen, neue Zwecke. DIAGONAL, Jg. 2014
Autor: Stephan (Hrsg.) Habscheid
CHF 10.00
ISBN: 978-3-8470-0393-9
Einband: PDF
Verfügbarkeit: Download, sofort verfügbar (Link per E-Mail)
+ -

Conversion - the deliberate or random utilisation of already existing articles, spaces and resources in innovative practices - is a word that is currently on everybody's lips at present. Everywhere, professional virtuousos of conversion? transform, convert, recycle and revamped, made use of and put on the market; beyond the consumer mainstream, too, people are tinkering, doing handicrafts, exchanging, patching, manoeuvring, and improvising. Conversion can be for a good cause, can be greatly valued as dynamic and innovative, but can also be put in a bad light for the improper "creative" use of achievements that are in principle quite valuable. The authors of this issue enquire into academic findings on methods and processes of conversion, their causes and consequences in past and present. They discuss current problems in architecture and urban planning, the real estate and financial sectors, art and literature, technological and cultural history, linguistics and mathematics, business and aid organisations, career choice, day-to-day business and private life.

Autor Habscheid, Stephan (Hrsg.) / Hoch, Gero (Hrsg.) / Brandt, Hildegard Schröteler-von (Hrsg.) / Stein, Volker (Hrsg.)
Verlag V&R unipress
Einband PDF
Erscheinungsjahr 2014
Seitenangabe 347 S.
Ausgabekennzeichen Deutsch
Abbildungen mit zahlreichen Abbildungen
Masse 4'212 KB
Auflage 14001 A. 1. Auflage

Über den Autor Stephan (Hrsg.) Habscheid

Stephan Habscheid (Prof. Dr.) is a professor of German studies and applied linguistics at Universität Siegen. He is principal investigator of the interdisciplinary project »Un/desired Observation in Interaction: Smart Environments, Language, Body and Senses in Private Homes« at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation«, Universität Siegen (together with Dagmar Hoffmann). His research interests include media linguistics, linguistic praxeology, language in institutions and organizations as well as small talk and conversation.Tim Hector (M.A.) works as a research assistant at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation« in the project »Un/desired Observation in Interaction: Smart Environments, Language, Body and Senses in Private Homes« at Universität Siegen. He did a PhD in applied linguistics on the linguistic domestication of voice assistants in private homes. His research is focussed on media linguistics, conversation analysis and linguistic praxeology.Dagmar Hoffmann (Prof. Dr.) is a professor of media sociology and gender media studies at Universität Siegen, Germany. She is principal investigator in the interdisciplinary project »Un/desired Observation in Interaction: Smart Environments, Language, Body and Senses in Private Homes« at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation«, Universität Siegen (together with Stephan Habscheid). Her research is focused on media and cultural sociology, digital literacy, and political participation.David Waldecker (Dr.) is a sociologist and an academic librarian in training at Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Darmstadt. He was a post-doc at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation«, Universität Siegen, and published his dissertation on Adorno in the recording studio in 2022.

Weitere Titel von Stephan (Hrsg.) Habscheid