New Writings from the U-M Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures

When:
September 23, 2016 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
2016-09-23T19:00:00-04:00
2016-09-23T20:30:00-04:00
Where:
Literati
124 E. Washington Street
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
USA

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Literati is delighted to partner with the University of Michigan’s Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures to celebrate new work by their esteemed faculty. Authors include:

Johannes von Moltke is Professor of Screen Arts and Cultures and Professor and Chair of Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Michigan. He is the author of No Place Like Home: Locations of Heimat in German Cinema and the editor of two volumes of writings by and about Siegfried Kracauer. His most recent book is The Curious Humanist: Siegfried Kracauer in America.

Helmut Puff is Professor of German and History at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and the co-editor of Cultures of Communication: Theologies of Media in Early Modern Europe and Beyond, forthcoming in December.

Scott Spector is Professor of History, German Studies, and Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan. He is a cultural and intellectual historian of modern central Europe, focusing on the interplay of ideology and culture in its many forms. He is the author of Prague Territories: National Conflict and Cultural Innovation in Franz Kafka’s Fin de Siècle (2000),  and co-editor, with Helmut Puff and Dagmar Herzog, of After the History of Sexuality: German Genealogies With and Beyond Foucault (2012). Violent Sensations: Sex, Crime, and Utopia in Vienna and Berlin, 1860-1914 is a study of understandings of urban sex and crime in scientific, police, and popular press representations, and in the articulations of criminal and sexual subjects themselves.

Silke-Maria Weineck is particularly interested in the many ways in which classical literature and philosophy continue to reverberate in the modern world. Her first book,The Abyss Above traces the figure of the mad poet through writings by Plato, Hölderlin and Nietzsche. The Tragedy of Fatherhood: King Laius and the Politics of Paternity in the West looks at the tensions that have characterized the concept of fatherhood from Sophocles and the Bible over Hobbes to Kleist and Freud. Our Ancient Wars, co-edited with Victor Caston, explores the presence of classical war writing in contemporary cultural production. She is currently working on a book tentatively titled The Irony Monster: First and Last Deity.

 

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