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Singing Schubert, Hearing Race: Black Concert Singers and the German Lied in Interwar Central Europe | NCGS Seminar

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

This presentation explores the rise in popularity of African American classical musicians in interwar Germany and Austria. Singing Lieder by Schubert, Brahms, and others, they challenged audiences’ expectations of what a black performer looked and sounded like in the transatlantic … Read more

“Russian Spy,” “German Voltaire,” “Fickle Genius”: August von Kotzebue as a Problem for German History and Literature | NCGS Seminar

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

The author of over 200 plays, August von Kotzebue (1761-1819) was one of the most prolific and successful writers of his day. Yet Kotzebue’s career was shadowed by controversy and bitter disputes, which culminated in his assassination by the student … Read more

Political Cover or Moral Imperative: Reparations in West Germany

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

Claire Greenstein is a postdoctoral researcher at Georgia Tech in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs. She received her PhD in political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in July 2018. Her dissertation focuses on … Read more

Religion as “Agent of Change”: Jewish and other Responses to Modernity in Germany, 1780-1860

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

The presentation explores the ambivalent role of Judaism and religiosity during the Sattelzeit, when German Jewry was confronted with deep reaching, sometimes threatening social change. The presentation sheds new light on Jewish coping strategies and the transformation of a socio-cultural … Read more