Colloquium 2020-2021
The Fellow colloquium takes place every Wednesdays, 4.15-5.45 p.m. (unless otherwise noted).
- 8th January 2020
Birgit Erdle (Lichtenberg-Kolleg):
Broken universalism. Siegfried Kracauer's political thought
- 15th January 2020
Thomas Maissen (German Historical Institute Paris):
Britannia and her sisters in the 17th and 18th century. Political representation and iconography
- 22nd January 2020
Dirk Moses (Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Sydney)
Postwar Memory, Postcolonial Conflict, and the Construction of ‘Genocide’
- 29th January 2020
Richard Fisher:
Publishing Strategies in the English-speaking world
- 4th November 2020
Jyotirmaya Sharma:
Melancholy as a Political Act
- 11th November 2020
Georgios Varouxakis:
Ex Germaniae lux: How did the idea of ‘the West’ reach America?
- 18th November 2020
Deniz Kılınçoğlu:
Learning to Feel Like a Nation: Nationalism and Emotions in Turkish Classrooms
- 25th November 2020
Alex Jordan:
Thomas Carlyle and Stoicism
- 2nd December 2020
Adam Storring:
Enlightened War? The Military Ideas of King Frederick II of Prussia
- 9th December 2020
Shiru Lim:
What's so civil about civil society? Stage acting, artifice, and the aesthetics of civility
- 16th December 2020
Caroline de Lima e Silva:
Gatekeepers of the realm: domestic judges’ strategies vis-à-vis the jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
- 13th January 2021
Francesca Antonini:
Between Weber and Mussolini: Caesarism and Charismatic Leadership in Robert Michels‘ Political Thought
- 20th January 2021
Sebastian Shirrmeister:
The Art of Revenge. Writing towards Poetic Justice in Post-Shoah Jewish Literatures
- 27th January 2021
Amandine Barb:
Governing Religious Diversity in a (Post)Secular Age: Teaching about Religion in American Public Schools
- 3rd February 2021
Weronika Romanik:
Transformations of Memory in the Microperspective. The Hebrew editions of the Writings from the Underground Archive of Bialystok Ghetto
- 10th February 2021
Will Levine:
Radical Kantianism and the Ideal of Emancipation in Modern Germany