 Hello, Professor Hobel. Thanks for joining us. Nice to meet you again. As you know, this is our bonus segment where we talk about what inspired you along the way. And yeah, let's start. What is work you think is worth looking into? One of the most important texts about stories is, in fact, Roland Barthes' Piesier du Texte. And another very fundamental thing was Gérard Genet, and I was happy to translate this into German. Introduction to the architext, which is the very fundamental text, and there he is talking about the discovery of the prological structures and the way how we think about dramatizing. One of the most inspiring things, not in the scholar world, but in the more literate world, was this book. And this is one of the structuralists' poets, 100 billion poems. And when you open it, you really have, it looks quite small, but there are really 100 and a thousand billions of poems. You can here put your own poem when you change one of the lines, one of the verses. So it's a really inspiring thing to think about how poetry and literature is working. On storytelling, one thing which inspired me a lot was this book, which is a photo novel, finally. A new kind of photo novel dating from I think 1985 or so, which has recently been republished, because it is really a very interesting thing to show a story. I just can use some of those pictures and very inspiring, different thing of story. You don't find any word, there's no word in this picture story. And yeah, at least the interpretation of Jagir Hida was very, very inspiring. Orality and Literacy, where he talks about where literacy comes from and how does it, how it shapes our view of thinking within stories. So this is about knowledge management in general. And when I am talking about knowledge management to my students, one of my greatest inspirations is this book. This is Paul Daggett and John C.D. Brown, very famous management theorists, The Social Life of Information, published in the year 2000, one of the first books, which was talking from the business perspective about how information is important in the organization, in the enterprise. And in the same time, we have the development of knowledge management in general. The title is in English Knowledge Creating Company. And in this text and some other text, they pinpointed to the fact that knowledge can only be transmitted when people meet at a certain place. And there they meet to tell stories and not just give some information. So they created the Japanese term, which is called Ba, Japanese word for enabling space. And in these enabling spaces, there are knowledge streams going on, which are mainly an aspect of stories. Some final remarks on my, or generally inspiration sources. These tiny books, for instance. Unfortunately, also still in German. This is Jungschul Hahn, philosopher, who is now based in the University of the Arts in Berlin. Quite small books, but very inspiring with reflections on our contemporary society, Mühlichkeitsgesellschaft, the society who is always fatigued, Transparency Society. And his latest book just two days ago, it is a book about the digital life we are experiencing. So at least for those who can read German, it is very inspiring. All right. There you have it guys. Thanks very much. I think this should be enough for the next couple of weeks or months. Yeah, Professor Holm, thank you very much for your time and for your inspirations. Yeah, great to have you back on. Thank you for this video. Bye.