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GERMAN YEAR 1 reading list Language Courses We strongly recommend at least one of the following grammar books, as you will need them from first year on: ● Martin Durrell/Katrin Kohl/Gudrun Loftus. Essential German Grammar. London: Arnold, 2002. – for First and Second Year Students ● Hammer's German Grammar and Usage, ed. Martin Durrell, Edward Arnold. th 5 edition 2011 – for Second and Final Year Students ● Hilke Dreyer/Richard Schmitt. Lehr- und Übungsbuch der deutschen Grammatik. Ismaning: Hueber, 2000. – for First and Second Year Students, also available in English. ● Cecile Zorach and Charolotte Melin. English Grammar for Students of German. 4th edition. London: Arnold, 2004. – for students unfamiliar with grammatical terminology The text book for ab initio students is: ● Dieter Sevin, Ingrid Sevin: Wie Geht's? An Introductory German Course (9th International Edition). Heinle Cengage Learning. ISBN: 9781439084090. In addition, we will be working with the following book to extend vocabulary, which will be vital in terms of your linguistic proficiency and your performance in the exams: ● Monika Reimann/Sabine Dinsel. Großer Lernwortschatz. Deutsch als Fremdsprache. Ismaning: Hueber, 2003. For improvement of your reading and writing skills in German, we recommend the following: ● Waltraud, Coles/ Dodd, Bill. Reading German. A course book and reference grammar. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. ● Duensing, Annette/ Baumann, Uwe. Developing Writing Skills in German. London: Routledge, 2006. GER4207 Foundations of German Studies (compulsory module for all students taking German) To get you started on the reading required for Foundations of German Studies, we would recommend you acquaint yourselves with the following: Language and Linguistics Stevenson, Patrick, and others. The German-Speaking World: A Practical Introduction to Sociolinguistic Issues, 2dn edn. London: Routledge, 2017. [In preparation for the course, see especially Part One: The Position of German In The World.] Literature Heym, Stefan. “Auf Sand gebaut,” in Auf Sand gebaut, Filz, pp. 39–54. Munich: btb, 2005. You might want to read the following article alongside Heym’s text: Kinzer, Stephen. “Anguish of East Germans Grows With Property Claims by Former Owners.” The New York Times, 5 June 1992. Available online: https://www.nytimes.com/1992/06/05/world/anguish-of-east-germans-grows-with- property-claims-by-former-owners.html Film Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau, Nosferatu (1922) Available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAX2WBzCh5Y History Fulbrook, Mary. A Concise History of Germany, 2dn edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014. Furthermore, we strongly recommend that you start, or continue, reading / listening to / watching as much German material as you can before you join us in September in order to give yourself a head start. Why not spend time over the summer familiarizing yourself with some aspects of German literature and culture? Explore contemporary fiction, for instance by our previous writers-in-residence: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/cagcr/writers-in-residence/writers-in-residence/. Some of them can be seen and heard on the web, see for instance https://www.sas.ac.uk/videos-and-podcasts/culture-language-and- literature/encounters-barbara-honigmann-and-judith-k%C3%B6hler or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaGzmfGvoJU . If you want to see what these authors made of London and QMUL (including some your future teachers), try Matthias Politycki: London für Helden. The Ale Trail (https://www.matthias-politycki.de/London-fuer-Helden~630) or Gregor Sander Tagebuch eines Jahres (https://www.wallstein-verlag.de/9783835315587-gregor- sander-tagebuch-eines-jahres.html). And should you be in Germany over the summer (or have other ways of accessing German films), Gregor Sander’s novel Was gewesen wäre (“What would have been”) has been adapted into film and will come out in August 2019: https://www.kino-zeit.de/film-kritiken-trailer/was-gewesen-waere-2019 . For those of you who need a little help in the form of translation, try the bilingual anthology Zwei Wochen in England. Österreichische AutorInnen in London (Two Weeks in England. Austrian Authors in London), edited by Heide Kunzelmann. You may also enjoy reading general book about Germany’s culture past and present, such as - John Ardagh: Germany and the Germans. Penguin Books: Harmondsworth 1995; - Neil MacGregor: Germany: Memories of a Nation. Penguin: Harmondsworth 2014; or - Philip Oltermann: Keeping up with the Germans. A History of Anglo-German Encounters. Faber & Faber 2012.
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