21 results
Search Results
2. On Visibility and Legitimisation of Languages: The ‘Linguistic Landscape’ in Adaama, Ethiopia
- Author
-
H. Ekkehard Wolff, Sileshi Berhanu, and Getinet Fulea
- Subjects
Linguistics ,History ,Sociolinguistics ,Language Representation ,Advertisment ,Orormo ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
With a focus on the city of Adaama (formerly: Nazret), the biggest urban agglomeration in Oromia Regional State, the paper addresses the “linguistic landscape” which is indicative of the overall sociolinguistic situation of a polity. Language use in the public space has not only practical-instrumental, but also historical, political, juridical, and most of all psycho-sociological dimensions, the latter relating to the symbolic value of written language use. The paper deals with multilingual graphic representations on public commercial and private sign-boards, advertisements, and notices in Adaama city, with an additional focus on the situation on the campus of Adama Science and Technology University. Under the chosen theoretical framework, it analyses language visibility in terms of language legitimisation, both in terms of peoples’ attitudes and based on official documents regarding language status and language use in present-day Ethiopia, such as the Education and Training Policy (1994), the Constitution of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (1995), the Revised Constitution of Oromia Regional State (2001/2006), and the Higher Education Proclamation (2009). The primary focus of the paper is on the status, functions, and representations of Afan Oromo, including a review of the major historico-political changes affecting this language from Imperial Ethiopa (before 1974), the Därg period (until 1991), and under the new Constitution of the FDRE (since 1995). The paper also deals with linguistic and graphic issues concerning the “orthographic” representations of the four languages used: Afan Oromo, Amharic, Arabic, and English, involving three different graphic systems: Fidäl (Abugida), Arabic, and Roman.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Ethiopia, Europe and Modernity: A Preliminary Sketch
- Author
-
Donald Crummey
- Subjects
History ,Modernity ,Diplomacy ,Relations Europe-Ethiopia ,Epistemology ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
This paper explores some of the issues of cultural epistemology which underlie the relations between Ethiopia and Europe. It briefly explores the origins of modern diplomatic contacts, arguing that the appropriation of modernity increasingly became a central concern of Ethiopia’s rulers in their relations with Europe. It then raises the question, if Europeanized modernity has increasingly marked Ethiopia in the twentieth century, how are we to discern Ethiopia’s contribution to this process? To what extent, in its modernization, has Ethiopia’s educated elite lost contact with an indigenous point of view? The paper argues that a critical appreciation of modernity in Ethiopia must be made against a background which historicizes the process whereby it came about, which takes fully into account the modes of reasoning embodied in Gǝʿǝz texts, and which privileges the views of those rural Ethiopians so lightly touched by modernity.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Figures de l'histoire dans la prose narrative française contemporaine
- Author
-
Christelle Reggiani
- Subjects
contemporary literature ,history ,stylistics ,figure ,syllepsis ,hyperbaton ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 - Abstract
This paper is based upon an historical hypothesis which could be formulated as such : the privilege granted to indirect modes of signifying in contemporary French narrative prose by the violence of XXth century's history. Hence the interest of the stylistic notion of figure (of speech), which implies that literary uses of figures elaborate, implicitly, a reflection on history : that is to say that literary history – as history of aesthetic forms – should also be an history of figures. This paper aims to sketch such a study, by choosing three examples (three figures, and three contemporary oeuvres): syllepsis (illustrated by Jean Rouaud's novels), hyperbaton (which analysis is based upon some narratives by Claude Simon and Laurent Mauvignier) and allegory (here exemplified by Antoine Volodine's novels).
- Published
- 2013
5. Four Sistine Ethiopians? The 1481 Ethiopian Embassy and the Frescoes of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican
- Author
-
Marco Bonechi
- Subjects
Ethiopian Embassy ,Diplomacy ,Sistine Chapel ,Art ,Painting ,History ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
As proposed by several scholars, among the many modern on-lookers depicted on the walls of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, foreign diplomats are also portrayed: e.g., the Portuguese ambassador and the Florentine emissaries. In the present paper it is suggested that portraits of four of the six members of the momentous Ethiopian delegation – which was headed by Antonio, chaplain of aṣe Ǝskǝndǝr, and arrived at Rome in the first half of November 1481 – may be identified in two scenes, i.e. the Temptation of Moses by Sandro Botticelli and the Crossing of the Red Sea by Biagio d’Antonio Tucci. The paper focuses on the relationship between the visual representation of these four men – Antonio being most probably included – and two contemporary literary works: the treatise by Paride de Grassi on the ambassadors to the Roman curia and the writing by Andreas Trapezuntius on the Roman political situation at the end of 1481 respectively. Such topics as the genuflexion of the Ethiopians and the content of Sixtus IV with the Ethiopian embassy are dealt with. The importance of the suggested identifications for the problematic chronology of the frescoes is also discussed, and so a few other aspects of the two narrative scenes.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. POPULAR LITERATURE AND CULTURAL MEMORY ON THE EXAMPLES OF LUKA ILIĆ ORIOVČANIN AND ANDRIJA KAČIĆ MIOŠIĆ
- Author
-
Josipa Tomašić
- Subjects
popular literature ,cultural memory ,truth ,history ,Andrija Kačić Miošić ,Luka Ilić Oriovčanin ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
In this paper we approach popular literature from the perspective of cultural memory studies, relying mostly on the theoretical insights of Jan and Aleida Assmann. Jan Assmann distinguishes between two modes of memory: communicative memory and cultural memory. Communicative memory relates to a group, takes the form of everyday communications, includes three to four interacting generations and is best illustrated by a mode of biographical memory. On the other hand, cultural memory is based on fixed points in the past, a high degree of formation and ceremonial communication, depends on a specialized practice and always has its specialized carriers. In this paper a more detailed analysis of the way in which popular literary texts form fixed points in the past, the symbolic figures of memory, is carried out. The importance of the categories of truth, memory and history is shown on the examples of popular folk writers Andrija Kačić Miošić and Luka Ilić Oriovčanin. Special attention is given to the forewords to Razgovor ugodni naroda slovinskoga (1756, 1759) and Lovorike (1874; 1990). Both Kačić and Oriovčanin show aspirations towards saving historic events and persons from being forgotten. We analyse the importance of memory in popular poetics by asking the following questions: a) what is the subject of memory; b) who remembers; and c) which mechanisms enable memory? A popular writer uses discursive strategies to constitute a community that remembers, as well as content that he wants to keep in memory. He refers to the historical truth, though the category of truth in popular texts can be read, in accordance with Foucault’s approach, as a product of discourse.
- Published
- 2016
7. A Historical Reading of Angela Carter’s «The Scarlet House»
- Author
-
Emilio José Álvarez Castaño
- Subjects
angela carter ,the scarlet house ,history ,philosophy of history ,postmodernity ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Angela Carter's work has been usually studied from feminist points of view and from postmodernist aspects as the rewriting of fairy tales. Without denying this fact, this paper wants to underline the importance of History in Angela Carter's work focusing on the analysis of her short story «The Scarlet House». Carter's ideas on History, most of them framed in postmodernity, can find a suitable place among different theories within philosophy of History, something which will allow a historical reading of this short story. This type of interpretation was admitted by Carter herself when she accepted the multiplicity of readings for the same literary work.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. La Création de Quinet et la logique du vivant : une épistémologie imaginaire
- Author
-
Gisèle Séginger
- Subjects
quinet ,natural history ,history ,evolutionism ,imagination ,Romanic languages ,PC1-5498 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Quinet studies the logic of life in natural history, history and the arts from an epistemological viewpoint. He shows interesting similarities between different fields of study, and he explains the specificity of the épistémè of the 19th century. This paper will show the impact of the concept of the unity of knowledgeon the writing of Quinet’s book, and the ideological and religious implications.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Entre agora e outrora: a escrita da história no cinema de Eduardo Coutinho
- Author
-
Claudia Cardoso Mesquita
- Subjects
Eduardo Coutinho ,documentary ,history ,Twenty years later ,metalworkers ,Language and Literature ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 - Abstract
Eduardo Coutinho’s contemporary cinema is marked by the interview as a dramatic form, as well as the register of the ongoing encounter between the director and his interviewees. However, this “art of the present”, as called by Consuelo Lins, implies a rarer, denser history-writing project. This paper explores this dimension of his work by comparing two films that are 20 years apart in their making: Twenty years later (1984) and Metalworkers(2004). Their similarities and differences allow us to note, between past and present, mutual insights that Coutinho’s diachronic gesture brings about, which hypothetically constitutes “the present as history”.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Verità Potere Giustizia. Prolegomeni a una lettura di 'Effetto Sicilia' di Carlo Alberto Madrignani
- Author
-
Mario Marino
- Subjects
Madrignani ,novel ,history ,justice ,power ,truth ,Romanic languages ,PC1-5498 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The paper discusses the final work (Effetto Sicilia, 2007) of one of the most significant scholars of Italian modern novel, Carlo Alberto Madrignani (1936-2008), by focusing on the interaction between three historical, literary and intellectual elements: 1) the scientifically rigorous civil tradition Madrignani belonged to, 2) the peculiar realistic code which arose in Sicily after the Italian unification and has been constantly renewed till our times in an astonishing, problematic continuity, 3) the Italian conflictual and dramatic modernity which triggered the birth of Sicilian modern novel and at the same time is provoked by the ‘outrageous’ kind of literature. The key issues of both the literary tradition and Italian modern history are 1) the violent and ambiguous sociopo litical control on collective and individual bodies (especially female), 2) the ambivalence of myth 3) the contradiction between individual and collective expectations on one side and institutions on the other 4) the uncertainty of trutdthe dissolution of theological and religious compensations.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. La obra de Ricardo Palma anté su época: ¿crónica y/o testimonio?
- Author
-
Leonor Sagermann Bustinza
- Subjects
chronicle ,history ,Peru ,Romanic languages ,PC1-5498 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Ricardo Palma, one of the most distinguished Peruvian writers, is known worldwide thanks to his Peruvian Traditions, a series to which he dedicated a considerable part of his life. The objective of this paper is to present other aspects of his literary and journalistic activity and to assess the value of his writings from the perspective of contemporary chronicle and testimony.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Magi in Ethiopic Tradition
- Author
-
Witold Witakowski
- Subjects
Literature ,History ,Magi ,Manuscripts ,Ge'ez ,Gǝʿǝz ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The paper traces various extra–biblical strains of tradition concerning the Magi (MT 2,1–12) in Geʿez literature. The Magi (mäsäggǝlan, säbʾa sägäl) are present in various Ethiopic compositions, both translated from other languages and original. The compositions discussed include inter alia apocryphal literature (The life of Adam and Eve, The Miracles of Jesus, The Book of the Birth of Mary, The Miracles of Mary), homiliaries (that for the feasts of Mary, and that for the feasts of the Archangel Raguel), and two commentaries on the Gospel. The tradition, as seen in the texts reviewed, is not consistent, and various stories, sometimes contradicting each other, are told about the Magi. Those strains of tradition which are not of local origin (as are the names of the Magi), come from a number of external sources with roots in early Christian literature. Some elements of this tradition (the Virgin with the Child visible in the star, the origin of the gifts from the Cave of Treasures, Zärädäšt as the ancestor of the Magi, and many thousand men forming their retinue) can be traced back to Syriac apocryphal and exegetical literature.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Vivre l'histoire : recit biographique et filiation – le cas de Jean Rouaud
- Author
-
Katarzyna Thiel-Jańczuk
- Subjects
filiation ,corporal memory ,Rouaud ,history ,récit de filiation ,biography ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 - Abstract
The present paper analyses a possibility of literary expression of historical past which is not known by a narrator from his own experience but only through his ancestors' – direct participants of traumatic events – accounts. On the basis of Michel de Certeau's and Paul Ricœur's theoretical reflections referring to the status of contemporary historical and fictional story and its narration and the intimate versus the official mode of biographical storytelling, the author of the text attributes these two modes to heroic, traditional type of biographical narration and the currently widespread filiative story (recit de filiation) respectively. The article discusses the process of confiding one's memories of the past in a series of stories, also called a "family autobiography" by a French writer, Jean Rouaud. In this process, a particular role is played by "corporeal memory" which is a way of transmitting physical suffering from one generation to another. Literature, which allows for such a transmission, becomes thus an unofficial, "minor" form of a historiographic discourse.
- Published
- 2013
14. 'Composer son rien avec un morceau de tout' : à propos des romans Les âmes grises et Le rapport de Brodeck de Philippe Claudel
- Author
-
Kateřina Drsková
- Subjects
contemporary French novel ,Philippe Claudel ,history ,First World War ,Second World War ,news item ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 - Abstract
The paper deals with the representation of History in the works of the contemporary French writer Philippe Claudel (*1962) – in his novels Gray Souls (Les ames grises, 2003) and Brodeck (Le rapport de Brodeck, 2007), to be specific. The author uses, according to his own words, mentions of History to create parallels with the present. In Gray Souls he evokes the First World War, in Brodeck the Second World War. In both cases, narration is the matter of insignificant, marginal narrators, who are, however, touched by the events, deciding to tell their story in order to deal with history, bad memories and reproofs. Analyses show the way Claudel's novels treat the question of memory, individual as well as collective, of the relation between History and individual destinies, of the role of testimony, memory and oblivion.
- Published
- 2013
15. Modern Ethiopia and Colonial Eritrea
- Author
-
Irma Taddia
- Subjects
Eritrea ,Colonialism ,State Formation ,National Historiography ,History ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The article develops some reflections on present-day Eritrea in the light of the colonial past and in the context of modern Ethiopia. If we consider Eritrea and its path towards independence, some differences and analogies emerge in comparison with other African colonies. The Eritrean independence is taking place today in a very specific context in post-colonial Africa. It is not a simple case of delayed decolonization, postponed by 30 years with respect to other former African colonies. The history of Eritrea must be studied within the colonial context: colonialism created a national identity, but Eritrea is a colony that did not become an independent state. This phenomenon can be attributed to various causes which I will try to underline. The process of state formation in Eritrea raises some problems for historians. The construction of a new political legitimacy is strictly connected to the birth of a national historiography in the country. I would like to examine in a critical way the process of writing history in contemporary Eritrea. Reconstructing the history of the past goes beyond the reconstruction of the history of the Eritrean state today. We have to consider the entire area – the Horn of Africa – in the pre-colonial period. The paper discusses the interrelation between the creation of the state and the national historiography.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A Marginal Note to 'Four Sistine Ethiopians?'
- Author
-
Gianfranco Fiaccadori
- Subjects
Ethiopian Embassy ,Sistine Chapel ,Diplomacy ,Art ,Painting ,History ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
With reference to Marco Bonechi’s article in this issue of Aethiopica, the present paper briefly surveys the evidence for the 1481 Ethiopian “embassy” to Pope Sixtus IV and then explores the possibility of identifying Anthony, head of that embassy, with “Fra Antonio Abissino” portrayed, most likely before 1527 by a painter called Schizzone, on the now lost tramezzo (‘choir screen’) of the Vatican church of Santo Stefano dei Mori.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Jesuit Patriarchate to the Preste: Between Religious Reform, Political Expansion and Colonial Adventure
- Author
-
Andreu Martínez D'Alòs-Moner
- Subjects
Jesuit Mission ,Portuguese Influence ,Christianity ,History ,Patriarchate ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
In this paper I analyse the reasons that lead Portugual to send a Jesuit Patriarch to Ethiopia. Such a mission represented a radical break from the tolerant attitude the Lusitans had been showing vis à vis this African Church; the embassies that for decades flowed between Ethiopia and Portugal were suddenly replaced by a one-way attempt of conversion that deeply affected Ethiopian Christian society for more than a century. This mission is placed at the crossroads of both a process of spiritualization that the Portuguese court, under the influence of the Jesuit fathers and the cardinal infantes, endured, and of the political stagnation of the Indian colonial project. But the Catholic Patriarchate would only come to the fore, I contend, at the outcome of the Bermudez affair. This episode, which has largely been underestimated by historiography, was crucial for pushing forward the King João III, the Pope and the Jesuits in the Patriarchal adventure.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Italy and Ethiopia: the Colonial Interlude Revisited
- Author
-
Alberto Sbacchi
- Subjects
Italian Occupation ,Politics ,History ,Italian Investment ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
In 1997 the president of the Italian Republic visited Ethiopia and Eritrea to acknowledge the mistakes of Italian colonialism toward the people of the Horn of Africa. The theme of Italian colonialism in Ethiopia has long been an emotional one. However, in the last few years new archival resources have become available. The literature on the Italian occupation has become more objective and reliable. Hence there is a better appreciation of the Italian presence in Ethiopia, and the new generation is ready to admit Italy’s positive contribution. There are statistics on Italian investments in Ethiopia that show that Italy made the largest financial investment that Africa has ever seen. Considering those and other facts, the author of the paper attempts to reassess the issue of the Italian presence in Ethiopia, in all objectivity and on its own merits. ATTENTION: Due to copy-right no online publication is provided.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The ak’aat k’aal movement among the Aari people of south-west Ethiopia
- Author
-
Alexander Naty, Morie Kaneko (ed.), and Masayoshi Shigeta (ed.)
- Subjects
Aari ,South-west Ethiopia ,Ak'aat K'aal ,Religion ,Politics ,History ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Students of African studies have reported a variety of religious movements under the rubric of independent churches. These include the Cherubim and Seraphim, the Church of the Lord, the Church of Simon Kimbangu, the Zionist and Ethiopianist’s independent churches in southern Africa. Most of these churches emerged in those countries that were under European colonial domination. Ethiopia did not experience European colonialism. Indeed, imperial Ethiopia conquered militarily less powerful kingdoms and chiefdoms that were located to the south and south-western of the then Abyssinia. The conquest of formerly independent populations in southern Ethiopia during the late nineteenth century introduced unequal power relations between the indigenous people and the new settlers. This paper examines the evolution of a religious movement referred to as ak’aat k’aal among the Aari people of south-west Ethiopia in the context of the indigenous forms of domination. Although the movement was short-lived, it was meant to enable the Aari to cope with the social psychological stress that the serfdom system generated. The Aari were not able to practice their traditional religion because of the serfdom. Therefore, they had to abandon their religion. However, doing this without finding a substitute was incompatible with Aari religious ideology. The ak’aat k’aal was a substitute just for a short period. ATTENTION: Due to copy-right no online publication is provided.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Jesuit Mission in Ethiopia (16th–17th Centuries): an Analytical Bibliography
- Author
-
Leonardo Cohen Shabot and Andreu Martínez D'Alòs-Moner
- Subjects
Jesuit Mission ,Portugal ,Colonialism ,History ,Literature ,Bibliography ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The Jesuit mission in Ethiopia was an episode of great importance in the history of Ethiopia and the Portuguese expansion. However, despite the number of studies dedicated to it a bibliography was still missing. This paper tries to fill the gap; it discusses the historiography of the mission, outlines the main themes treated and provides a comprehensive list of secondary literature.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. An Outline of the National Archives and Library of Ethiopia
- Author
-
Katarzyna Hryćko
- Subjects
Literature ,History ,National Archives ,Libraries ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Ethiopia is a country of a centuries-old tradition and history of writing. It possessed its own unique system for gathering materials of historical importance and a pecular library system. Throughout the years manuscripts were kept under the custody of Ethiopian Church monks. In the 20th century Ethiopia’s succesive rulers attached great importance to the building of a European style central repository of all written materials. They established and gradually developed the National Archives and Library of Ethiopia (NALE). The paper outlines the history of NALE from its beginnings up to now.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.