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All of our events are open to the public! No matter who you are, you are welcome and we’d love to see you there.

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MODERN GERMAN-JEWISH HISTORIOGRAPHY: BETWEEN ‘USABLE PAST,’ NATIONAL NARRATIVE AND THE TRANS-NATIONAL CHALLENGE

569 Hamilton Hall 102 Emerson Drive, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Presenting is Guy Miron, Professor of Jewish History and Chair of the Department of History, Philosophy and Jewish Studies at the Open University of Israel. Until the Holocaust German-Jewish history was associated with Jewish enlightenment, emancipation and assimilation, new religious movements, … Read more

LIVING GHOSTS: CHRISTIAN PETZOLD’S GESPENSTER-TRILOGIE

569 Hamilton Hall 102 Emerson Drive, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Presenting is Rory Bradley, Visiting Assistant Professor of German at Wake Forest University, who received his Ph.D. from the Carolina Duke Graduate Program in German Studies. The term “ghost” commonly refers to the lingering spirit of a deceased person whose existence … Read more

DUTCH-JEWISH-FEMALE: THE CRITICAL RECEPTION OF ETTY HILLESUM’S WRITINGS (1914-1943) AND THE VARYING BOUNDARIES OF THE CANON

569 Hamilton Hall 102 Emerson Drive, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Presenting is Gabriele Weinberger, Professor of German, French, English, Modern and Classical Languages at Lenoir-Rhyne University in North Carolina. Etty Hillesum, a Amsterdam university student of philosophy and Russian literature, was a prolific writer during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. … Read more

Broken Lives: How Ordinary Germans Experienced the 20th Century

569 Hamilton Hall 102 Emerson Drive, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

This event is part of the North Carolina German Studies Seminar and Workshop Series. Based on six dozen autobiographies of the age cohort born during the Weimar Republic, this project looks at the ruptures of German history from below which … Read more

From Shortage to Surplus: Demographic Change and Demolition in Eisenhüttenstadt, 1980-Present

569 Hamilton Hall 102 Emerson Drive, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

After the Wende the former socialist model-city, Eisenhüttenstadt, experienced a fundamental transformation of its “housing problem” from an acute shortage to a surplus. Although many of the processes of transition have long since been completed, the social, economic, and cultural … Read more