CAUTG / APAUC

Canadian Association of University Teachers of German / L’Association des Professeurs d’Allemand des Universités Canadiennes

Browsing Posts published in March, 2009

This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 28, 2009
11:30 am to 1:00 pm

As a way of marking the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany, CCGES has invited Dr. Wilhelm Bleek (Professor Emeritus, Political Science, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum) to consider the FRG’s first capital, Bonn. Having grown up in the “Rhine metropolis”, Prof. Bleek has promised to provide some personal memories from the early years of the Bonner Republik as well as perspectives on the processes and personalities which led to the fledgling state orienting itself to the West.

brd-flagbleekAll are welcome, but attendees are asked to
RSVP to ccges@yorku.ca

Time: 11:30 am – 1:00 pm
Location: 230R York Lanes (map)


This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 25, 2009
2:00 pm to 4:00 pm

On Monday, May 25th, CCGES will host a delegation from Ontario’s German partner state, Baden-Württemburg, which will include Dr. Peter Frankenberg (Minister for Science, Research and Art) and Ms. Tanja Gönner (Environment Minister).

As part of the itinerary, CCGES and York’s Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES) have organized an Experts’ Roundtable on climate change strategies. In addition to the two ministers, participants will include Professors Jose Etcheverry, Mark Winfield and Arlene Gould (FES), among others.

ontario-flag2b-w-flag2Time: 2:00 – 4:00 pm
Location:
280 York Lanes (map)

All are welcome. RSVP to ccges@yorku.ca


This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 21, 2009 8:30 am to May 23, 2009 7:00 pm

Conference at Le Centre canadien d’études allemandes et européennes, Université de Montréal

Organized by Till van Rahden, Canada Research Chair for German and European Studies, Université de Montréal

In collaboration with Marcus Funck, The Canadian Centre for German and European Studies, York University, the German General Consulate, Montréal, the Goethe-Institut, Montréal, the Joint Initiative in German and European Studies, University of Toronto, the Department of German Studies, McGill University, the Faculté des arts et des sciences and the Département de littératures et de langues modernes, Université de Montréal

In its obsessive quest for normality, the Federal Republic, which will turn 60 on May 23, 2009, is a strange country. While citizens of most countries pride themselves on being different, postwar Germans have longed for normality ever since 1949. More than anything they wished to be like everyone else, to blend into Socialist or Western modernity, to become invisible citizens of a post-national Europe on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Not surprisingly, the search for normality turned out to be at once elusive and futile. Many turns in postwar German history reminded citizens of the elusiveness of normality and the peculiar place of their country within larger trajectories of Socialist and Western modernity. By opening up new avenues of research for the study of the largest country in postwar Europe, the conference encourages transatlantic reflections on the fate of democracy, the rule of law, and representative government since the caesura of World War II and the Holocaust and since the return of history with the end of the Cold War.

Whereas many studies explore the histories of West and East Germany within a framework of Americanization/Westernization or Sovietization, Liberalization or Democratization, this workshop seeks to explore the bizarre aspects of postwar German history. Postwar Germans’ peculiar desire to become “normal” call perhaps for methodologies and analytical approaches similar to those of scholars who explore stories of magic and miracles, of madness and mysticism, of monsters and saints to understand late medieval and early modern cultures in their ways of envisioning normality and enforcing norms. Not surprisingly, medievalists and early modernists have developed methodologies and narrative techniques that assign a key role to the “creative and disruptive presence of ‘the other’—the outsider, the stranger, the alien, the subversive, the radically different—in systems of power and thought” (Natalie Zemon Davis).

In light of such reflections, this conference brings together scholars whose work has provided transformative insights into postwar German history. It aims to spark intellectual exchanges and foster ways of thinking that are responsive to particularities, to individualities, oddities, discontinuities, contrasts, and singularities, to diverse ways of belonging and being a citizen in the postwar Germanys. The very plenitude of sources that allow for an analysis of bizarre stories limits our audacity to do just that. The flipside of the seemingly inchoate and limitless abundance of documents and other remnants of German history since 1945 is the danger of capitulating before an opaque mass of facts. Participants are therefore encouraged to identify those episodes and periods of these six decades full of wonder that might impress us as “having a physiognomy of their own” (Siegfried Kracauer). Participants are invited to center their analysis on a single event or site, a concept or phrase, an illuminating anecdote or a biography that captures a peculiar aspect of these six decades full of wonder. The conference format therefore encourages presentations that are at once shrewd and witty, entertaining and to the point.

In paradoxical ways, reflections on postwar Germany’s six decades full of wonder may draw our attention to the strange and contingent, therefore inherently fragile foundations of democratic polities. The conference thus takes seriously recent interest in the “democratic miracle” that is postwar Germany. To explore postwar German history in light of larger questions on the contingent history and the inherently fragile nature of democracy as a way of life is critical to anyone interested in the future of representative government, the rule of law, and of the idea of a liberal polity. Participants are invited to explore how postwar Germans freed themselves from the experiences of mass murder and mass death, and how they came to embrace democracy as a way of life. The conference is less interested, in short, in revisiting the political effects of the “economic miracle” or of allied military and economic presence than in opening up new avenues for studying the unexpected and improbable “political miracle” of Germany’s “democratic moment.”

Conference Program – preliminary

Sessional Appointment in German
University of Victoria
Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies

The Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies at the University of Victoria invites expressions of interest from qualified instructors for sessional assignments from 1 September 2009 to 30 April 2010 within CUPE Local 4163 (Component 3) Sessional Lecturers certification. Course assignments may include both introductory- and advanced-level courses in German culture, literature, and language, subject to funding and enrolment criteria. Successful applicants will have completed or be nearing completion of a Ph.D. in German Studies and will have proven teaching experience in the North American university system.

The assignment selection criteria will include qualifications and ability of the candidate(s) based on relevant education and professional experience and proven teaching effectiveness. The appointments will be made at the rank of Sessional Lecturer and salary will be commensurate with the sessional salary scale. Qualified applicants should submit a letter of application and curriculum vitae, and arrange to have two confidential letters of reference sent to:

Dr. Peter Gölz, Chair
Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies
University of Victoria
P.O. Box 3045
Victoria, BC V8W 3P4 Canada

Phone: (250) 721-7316
Fax: (250) 721-7319
E-mail: pgolz@uvic.ca

Deadline: 15 April 2009 or until a suitable candidate is found. Employment decisions will be made by 30 April 2009.

The University reserves the right to fill additional teaching assignments from the pool of applicants for this posting.

The University of Victoria is an equity employer and encourages applications from women, persons with disabilities, visible minorities, aboriginal peoples, people of all sexual orientations and genders, and others who may contribute to further diversification of the University.

All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however, in accordance with Canadian Immigration requirements, Canadian citizens and permanent residents will be given priority. Please include a sentence on your CV indicating your citizenship.

This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 19, 2009

CCGES is pleased to present a visit to Toronto by Dr. Jens Reich, one of Germany’s leading scientific ethicists and a prominent figure in the citizens’ movement which helped topple East Germany’s communist regime in the peaceful revolution of 1989.

jens-reichWhile in Toronto on Tuesday, May 19th, Dr. Reich will participate in two events. The first will take place in the CCGES Meeting Room (230 York Lanes) beginning at 11:30 am and is intended to give the York students and faculty a chance to discuss the legacy of the citizens-based movements which helped redefine Europe’s social and political landscape with one of their most important actors.

The second event is a talk by Dr. Reich on the same topic and is being presented in cooperation with the German General Consulate  Toronto and the German-Canadian Chamber of Industry and Commerce (AHK). The talk will take place in the offices of AHK (480 University Avenue, Suite 1500) and begins at 6:00 pm to be followed by a reception. This event is open to all interested indiv iduals, however due to space limitations, attendees are requested to RSVP to ccges@yorku.ca

Jens Reich studied medicine and molecular biology at (east) Berlin’s Humboldt-University before proceeding with an academic career. After becoming a Professor and Department Head at the GDR’s Central Institute for Molecular Biology in 1980, he lost these positions for organizing a discussion circle for citizens critical of the East German regime. In the fall of 1989 he was a prominent figure in Neues Forum, the grassroots social movement key in helping topple the GDR’s communist dictatorship. Dr. Reich was subsequently elected to the East German Volkskammer in elections in the spring of 1990, and later received the Theodor-Heuss Medal for his role in the peaceful revolution. In 1994, Dr. Reich contested the election for Bundespräsident as the candidate for Bündnis 90/Die Grünen, an alliance of the West German Green Party and a variety of progressive political parties from the former East, including Neues Forum. In addition to his work in politics, Dr. Reich has continued to be active in the world of natural science and has been a member of Germany’s National Ethics Council since 2001.

For more information on either of these events, please contact CCGES Coordinator, John Paul Kleiner, at jkleiner@yorku.ca

This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 19, 2009
4:00 pm to 5:30 pm

geertsAs part of the CCGES European Ambassadors Lecture Series, the Centre is pleased to welcome H.E. Wim J.P. Geerts, the Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, to York to speak on “Opportunities and Challenges for Europe and EU-Canada Relations”.

This event is open to the public, but due to space considerations, we would ask that interested parties RSVP to ccges@yorku.ca

Time: 4:00 – 5:30 pm
Location: York Hall A107, Glendon Campus (map)

This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 13, 2009
11:30 am to 1:00 pm

To mark “Europe Day 2009″ and as part of the CCGES European Ambassadors Lecture Series, the Centre is pleased to welcome H.E. Margers Krams to campus.

kramsH.E. Krams’ talk is entitled “Latvia in the EU: Preparation, Participation, Destination” and will take place in the context of Prof. Heather MacRae’s fourth-year “European Union” course. All are welcome to attend, however due to the space considerations, we ask that you RSVP to ccges@yorku.ca or 416 736 5695.

Time: 11:30 am – 1:00 pm
Location: Winters College 118 (map)

This post is syndicated from CCGES. Read the whole post here.


May 11, 2009
4:30 pm to 6:30 pm

Abraham (Aby) Warburg (1866-1929) was a German art historian and cultural theorist whose research examined the legacy of the Classical world in the most varied areas of western culture through to the Renaissance. Warburg was responsible for establishing iconography as an independent discipline of art history.

For this roundtable, York PhD candidates Frank Scherer,
Karl Dahlquist and MA student Martin Parrot will be
joined by Prof. Markus Reisenleitner (Humanities) for a
discussion to moderated by Prof. Susan Ingram
(Humanities).

Time: 4:30 - 6:00 pm
Location: 230R York Lanes

Women’s Creativity around 1800
Friday, May 22, 2009 Carleton University, Southam 303 Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

8:45 -9:00 Welcome
Angela Borchert, University of Western Ontario

9:00 -10:15 Gendering Creativity: “Weibergenie” and “Schöne Seele”?
(Angela Borchert, University of Western Ontario)

Linda Dietrick, University of Winnipeg:
Conceiving Female Genius circa 1800 Christine Lehleiter, University of Toronto: “Schöne Seele”: Depth or Surface? Why it Makes Sense for Female Authors to Claim the Latter

10:15 -10:30 Coffee Break

10:30 – 12:15 Performing Creativity: City and Salon?
(Gaby Pailer, University of British Columbia)

Diana Spokiene, York University, Toronto: Rethinking the Private/Public Divide: Performing (in) the City in Eighteenth-Century German Women’s Writings
Andrea Ressel, Universität Rostock: Die jüdischen Salondamen im Berlin des ausgehenden 18. Jahrhunderts: Zwischen literarischer Produktion und beginnender Emanzipation
Giulia Frontoni, Universität Göttingen: “Lady Bunsen wanted to meet me”. Women’s friendships and cultural exchange around 1830

12:15 -1:45 Lunch

1:45 -3:00 Discourses of Creativity: Religion and Biology?
(Birte Giesler, University of Sidney)

Caroline Gerlach Berthaud, Université de Montréal: Pietismus, Empfindsamkeit und Aufklärung in der Geschichte des Fräuleins von Sternheim von Sophie von La Roche (1730-1807)
Susanne Balmer, Universität Bern, Visiting Scholar UBC: “Das Mädchen macht eine ganz neue Gattung von Charakter aus!” – Der Entwicklungsroman und seine Weiblichkeitsentwürfe um 1800

3:00 -3:30 Coffee Break

3:30 -4:45 Creative Genres: Adaptation and Transformation?
(Linda Dietrick, University of Winnipeg)

Gaby Pailer, University of British Columbia: Übersetzungskultur und literarische Kreativität am Beispiel von Charlotte Schiller
Thomas Wortmann, Universität Köln: Korrodierte Tradition. Genreverhandlungen in den Texten Annette von Droste-Hülshoffs

4:45 – 5:15 Women’s Creativity around 1800: Considerations and Directions?
(Marianne Henn, University of Alberta)