Friday, May 07, 2010

Mainz!



I HAVE FOUND a degree course where, even as a mother-tongue English-speaker, I could spend the entire three years studying BA German in a quaint historical town in Germany.

The idea of possibly having to move city in the UK to study a language spoken only a few hundred miles across the water always did strike me as bizarre. If you want to learn German, go to Germany!


The course is called Translation with Cultural Studies (Translations-, Sprach und Kulturwissenschaft) at the Johannes Gutenberg Universität in Mainz. Instead of spending three years reading great literature (which would be very nice, but a huge indulgence; also the amount of reading required on a literature course is momentous) ~ I would study German as my main foreign language (the so-called B language; English, as my mother-tongue would be the A language). The goal being to be able to translate into and out of the B language with near mother-tongue fluency. I would then pick a C language (French), which would be brought up to “excellent passive fluency” ~ ie you translate out of French into German and English (but never vice-versa). There’s also an option to do a D language, in which case I would pick Dutch. As y’all can see from yesterday’s post, Dutch stands midway between German and English on the dialect continuum, so it’s not particularly difficult to pick up.


I don’t know any UK institution where I could learn German, French and Dutch all together. People have always queried why Dutch? Even a student of BA Norwegian expressed astonishment at this Wunsch of mine. Dutch-Flemish has over 24 million speakers in the EU (plus six million more in South Africa as Afrikaans), which is far more than all the Scandinavian languages put together. Looking at the map, French and German form a massive block of central Europe, and Dutch fills in the gap both geographically and linguistically. Dutch is the closest major relative to English, which is a cross between French and Germanic. So the four languages tie together nicely. See: there is some method to my madness! I just think it’s amazing I finally found a course where I can do everything I want in the right location. (I’ve always wanted to do German in Germany but until I found this course it didn’t seem possible.)


I’ve posted up some pictures of Mainz, a mediaeval town on the banks of the Rhine in Western Germany, about a hundred miles from France, Luxemburg and Belgium.

Named after Johannes Gutenberg, the father of modern printing, the university was established in 1477. It now has 34,000 students and is unusual among ancient universities in offering nearly all its facilities on a single campus. Most mediaeval universities in Europe are scattered across various sites in town.


If I want to get on this course I’m going to have to bring my German up to scratch massively. My fluency has improved since I read the Christiane F memoir. Dictionary in hand, I copied every single word I wasn’t entirely sure of into a thick notebook along with its translation and when this seemed laborious I told myself this is how countless people across the world have learned English...

I’ve reached a point now, where I’m starting to be able to use German practically, which is the whole point of learning a foreign language, surely. I can read German-language websites. It took long enough to get here. But I’ve a way to go before I’m ready for this course...

I would actually get a vocational qualification. I would be qualified to do something at long last!

Link: “German in Germany” at Mainz University.



Illustrated top to bottom left-right-left-right: panorama view of town and university; university main foyer; Roman Catholic cathedral; white statue; regional parliament; a tower ~ my ideal home; tudor buildings in Kirschgarten

13 comments:

  1. Gleds, are you still up ... what time is it there ... must be well after midnight?

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  2. Magnificent plans. Sounds like something up your alley. Go for it!

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  3. Gleds you're omnipresent this week! Found a new internet cafe? Mainz is beautiful then I love any of the Alpine German towns. Clean up, apply, do it, get a fresh start! Ha your word verification is 'poing' sort of like 'ping' . . go on . .ping into action

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  4. Don't learn Dutch and German in one shot, you will be completely mixed up, it's just like learning Queens English and Cockney. The Raaain in Spaaain ... Mainz is a nice town have been there ages ago.
    BTW Afrikaans has nothing to do with dutch ! I know that from a South African group I met in Amsterdam ! They didn't understand a single word and therefore spoke English. Fortunately in Amsterdam everything is in English too, menu cards etc.

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  5. I hope that you will follow through. You have a good mind. And know that you would be qualified to do many things. Keep your hope alive and go do these things for which you have passion.

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  6. Bimbimbie: Yes! The General Election was "too exciting"..!

    Rita: Where there's a will there's a way ;-)...

    Baino: I will ping into action.
    I found free broadband ~ explain later

    Gattina: Written Afrikaans is v similar to Dutch though ~ I've seen it. Then again written French has lots of words similar to English but French is exceedingly difficult to follow if you're not ready for the onslaught of mushed syllables...
    If I studied Dutch now I would be at basic level 1 "mijn naam is Gledwood, ik ben al achtendedrtig jaar oud, ik komme uit London waar we hebben veel winkels ~ een bloemezaak, een kebabhuis en een supermarket ~ och! En we hebben och een garage!" Was that any good, did I make more than 10 errors? That's all I remember from basic Dutch except "in the hospital"
    "heef de zuster u temperatuur opgenomen?"
    Och! Ik moet nu gaan!!
    Tot later!

    Gledwood ;-)...

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  7. Syd: sorry I missed your comment because you left it after I brought up this window...

    People keep telling me I'm "intelligent" but what does that mean if it's not applied to anything?

    I need to be qualified on paper to do something ~ then I could get a decent job. Wahey!!!

    Reeny: I will. Need to sort out funding big time. Surely there are European grants/loans/thing for this...?

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  8. I think it's best to concentrate on German first to get a good control of the language.
    If you could obtain a grant for entering this project, that would be perfect.
    Good Luck!

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  9. I have to get the German really, really good before I even apply... otherwise I'll get outclasssed by the other applicants. SURELY there is some EU fund for people like me wanting to do something like this?... They chuck enough money everywhere else!!

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  10. ps Bimbimbie: it was 3:30 when I posted that; you commented about an hour later

    my posts and comments always record the time, but other people's sometimes just have dates, I don't know why...

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  11. Gleds, it sounds a wonderful idea and it's greta to read you being so positive. Go for it!

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  12. I really have to get my German AND French up to scratch... and learn as much Dutch as I can... the application forms, everything, will be in German... Then again this is a course FOR foreigners. But it's like being an overseas student anywhere: you're expected to demonstrate an effective grasp of the language before they'll let you in

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