Buy Robinson the Younger by Joachim Heinrich Campe online at Alibris. We have new and used copies available, in 7 editions - starting at $ Shop now. · In his adaptation of Robinson Crusoe, Campe sets out to examine the legitimacy of his contemporary social reality (in Europe in the broadest sense) by tracing its origin back to the most basic roots conceivable. The experimental character of his book is emphasised and—to an extent—explicitly introduced through the frame narrative which constitutes Campe’s most important addition to Defoe’s Cited by: 1. 4 Joachim Heinrich Campe, Robinson der Jüngere, ed. Alwin Binder and Heinrich Richartz (Stuttgart: R ; 12 It must have been a mid-century edition that fell into the hands of R. Hick of Woodhouse Hill, Leeds, who undertook a new translation specifically from the German for his own little boys.
Joachim Heinrich Campe's Robinson the Younger: universal moral foundations and intercultural relations. Full citation; Abstract. In his adaptation of Robinson Crusoe, Campe sets out to examine the legitimacy of his contemporary social reality (in Europe in the broadest sense) by tracing its origin back to the most basic roots conceivable. It was first recognised by a German writer that Robinson Crusoe contained the kernel of an exciting story for younger people. Accordingly, in , Joachim Heinrich Campe translated and edited Defoe's work to produce Robinson der Jüngere (Robinson the Younger). Robinson the younger by Joachim Heinrich Campe () 5 editions published Campe, Joachim Heinrich Author; Homann, Georg Gotthilf Jacob Author; Homann, Nikolaus Karl Daniel ; Rhling, Johann Christoph ; Berthelot, Sabin Author;.
Buy Robinson the Younger by Joachim Heinrich Campe online at Alibris. We have new and used copies available, in 7 editions - starting at $ Shop now. Robinson the Younger, Volume 1 Joachim Heinrich Campe Full view - Robinson the Younger Joachim Heinrich Campe, John Timaeus Full view - Robinson the Younger. In his adaptation of Robinson Crusoe, Campe sets out to examine the legitimacy of his contemporary social reality (in Europe in the broadest sense) by tracing its origin back to the most basic roots conceivable. The experimental character of his book is emphasised and—to an extent—explicitly introduced through the frame narrative which constitutes Campe’s most important addition to Defoe’s story: Here the emergence of the rules and routines are extensively mooted by the father (who.
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