literature, third space, presence, fotography, fiction
Abstract
Introduction to the special issue „Wie Worte Berge versetzen. Spielarten literarischer Raum-Präsenzen in narrativen Texten vom 19.–21. Jahrhundert“
Author Biographies
Hanna Nohe, Justus Liebig University Giessen
Hanna Nohe is a researcher and lecturer at the Department of Romance Languages and Literature at the University of Gießen. Her doctoral thesis sheds light on cultural identities in the fictitiously Oriental epistolary travel novel of European Enlightenment, published under the title Fingierte Orientalen erschaffen Europa (Fink 2018). In her second book, Migrierende Subjekte in romanischen Literaturen der Welt (De Gruyter 2024), she analyses the socio-economic perspective of migrant subjects in current literatures of the Global South. She has contributed articles, among others, on the epistolary novel, misunderstandings and intercultural mediation, and the transmission of non-white voices in journals such as Rivista di letterature moderne e comparate, Apropos, ItalianoLinguaDue, and in collective volumes.
Marina Ortrud Hertrampf, University of Passau
Marina Ortrud Hertrampf is Professor of French and Spanish Philology (Literature and Cultural Studies) at the University of Passau (Germany). She ist author of a monography on the interrelations of photography and novel in French Postmodernism (2011), a study on the spatial dimensions in Spanish Corpus Christy plays (2018) and a small book on French graphic novels on the Arabic Spring (2016). Her research interests are spatial theories, cultural contact, imagology, migration, intermediality, graphic novels. She is althoug Co-editor of the journal Hispanorama and the book series “Aesthetics of Roma – Self and External Representations” (AVM), “Forum Junge Romanistik” (AVM) and “LiteraturKulturRäume” (Stauffenburg Verlag).
2025. Einführende Überlegungen zu Spielarten literarischer Raum-Präsenzen in narrativen Texten vom 19.-21. Jahrhundert. apropos [Perspektiven auf die Romania]. 14 (Jun. 2025), 10–14. DOI:https://doi.org/10.15460/apropos.14.2398.