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Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
What is the status of women's writing in German today, in an era when feminism has thoroughly problematized binary conceptions of sex and gender? Drawing on gender and queer theory, including the work of Lauren Berlant, Judith Butler, and Michel Foucault, the essays in this volume rethink conventional ways of conceptualizing female authorship and re-examine the formal, aesthetic, and thematic terms in which "women's literature" has been conceived. With an eye to the literary and feminist legacy of authors such as Christa Wolf and Ingeborg Bachmann, contributors treat the works of many of contemporary Germany's most significant literary voices, including Hatice Akyün, Sibylle Berg, Thea Dorn, Tanja Dückers, Karen Duve, Jenny Erpenbeck, Julia Franck, Katharina Hacker, Charlotte Roche, Julia Schoch, and Antje Rávic Strubel -- authors who, through their writing or their role in the media, engage with questions of what it means to be a woman writer in twenty-first-century Germany. Contributors: Hester Baer, Necia Chronister, Helga Druxes, Valerie Heffernan, Alexandra Merley Hill, Lindsey Lawton, Sheridan Marshall, Beret Norman, Mihaela Petrescu, Jill Suzanne Smith, Carrie Smith-Prei, Maria Stehle, Katherine Stone. Hester Baer is Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland. Alexandra Merley Hill is Assistant Professor of German at the University of Portland.
Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
Edited by
Hester Baer, Associate Professor of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland,Alexandra Merley Hill, Assistant Professorof German at the University of Portland
This article describes the natural history of a large colony of emperor penguins Aptenodytes for steri, its size, dispersal pattern of chicks, and associations with other bird and mammal species. A mid-season count of 19,364 chicks indicated that about 20–25,000 breeding pairs had been present in June and July. The colony was fragmented into several sub-groups which showed different mean sizes of chicks and survival to fledging. Other species observed included leopard seals Hydrurga leptonyx, the only major predators, which preyed heavily on both adults and fledging chicks. Fledgelings left the colony over a period of about 10 days; departure was an active process in which the chicks walked to the ice edge and dispersed in groups, swimming consistently southward. At this time they were still in about 60% down and weighed about 10 kg, having lost some 30% of the heaviest mass achieved during parental feeding.
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