Spring 2024 German Studies Newsletter

Dear Alums and Friends of German Studies,

Our winter and spring quarters have been chock full of exciting events for German Studies at UW!

Our department hosted two highly popular authors in contemporary German culture: Max Czollek (Desintegriert Euch!) and Miriam Stein (Berlin—Seoul—Berlin). We also inaugurated the first of what will become the Annual Graduate Student Invited Lecture: the grad students hosted Huaping Lu-Adler, whose new book on Kant and racism is stirring up the world of Kant scholarship. Finally, we welcomed the spring with the invigorating sounds of Swiss Alphorn Music from the world-renowned Alphorn performer, Yannick Wey, on tour from Lucerne. 

We are especially proud of our graduating PhDs this year, all three of whom have landed great jobs in a tough academic market!  Jeff Jarzomb, whose dissertation critiques the developing ideas of ‘Volk’ around 1800, will join the faculty at the University of Nebraska; Matthew Childs, who writes on catastrophe in the nineteenth century, will be teaching at Wake Forest University in North Carolina; and Aaron Carpenter, who studies multilingualism in contemporary German novels, is heading to Allegheny College in Pennsylvania. We wish them joy and success in their new adventures!

It has been particularly inspiring to see the sharing of ideas and collaborative readings in our Departmental Seminars each quarter. In the winter, we tried to get into the mind of a fin-de-siècle officer perambulating through nocturnal Vienna in Arthur Schnitzler's "Lieutenant Gustl." In the spring, we tackled a contemporary poem by Max Czollek. All are welcome to our quarterly seminars—we hope you will join us in the fall! 

We also hope you will be able to find us when you come to campus. Our home in Denny Hall is proving hard to locate for some, especially since our neighbors in Anthropology installed a handsome new sign on the 3rd-floor landing:

UW Anthropology

One might expect the University to provide this clear signage to help visitors navigate their way around campus buildings, but the administration leaves it to departments to fund their own visibility efforts. This is what visitors see on the German side of the hall:

german hallway

So here’s our ask for you: please consider donating to the Friends of German fund to help defray the cost of this sign, and—more importantly—to support the continuing mission of the department to enrich the lives and learning of our students. We are grateful to Judith Alexander, for instance, who made a very generous donation in the memory of Rosalie Motz (PhD UW German, 1978). Her gift is currently enabling the students on our exchange programs in Vienna and Berlin to gain cultural and educational experiences they would otherwise have missed out on.

Sincerely,

ellwood wiggins

Ellwood Wiggins :: Chair, German Studies

Ida Rosalie Motz Russell was born in Bessarabia, then lived in Poland with her parents and two brothers. They had to flee to Germany, and after the war emigrated to Canada. She attended the University of British Columbia before coming to the University of Washington (as Rosalie “Lee” Wright), completing her Master’s degree in German in 1970, and her PhD in 1978. Her dissertation, “Poetic Consciousness in Günter Kunert's Prose,” is obtainable through the UW Library. Prior to finishing the… Read more
On Friday April 12, the Berlin-based German Jewish writer Max Czollek gave an attention-grabbing talk, "Memorials Won't Help Us Now! Memory Culture and the Rise of the Radical Right in Germany.” The talk, organized by Rafael Balling and Jason Groves with additional support from the Simpson Center for the Humanities and the Stroum Center for Jewish Studies, was one of the most well-attended departmental talks in recent memory. Czollek’s talk, which was a preview of a new piece of public writing… Read more
The Department of German Studies was honored to welcome author and journalist Miriam Stein to Seattle during a research visit for a film being developed based on her book, Die gereizte Frau.  We were very grateful that she took the time to deliver her fascinating talk: “Thoughts on Contemporary Wisdom,” which was her first public discussion of her upcoming book, Weise Frauen.  This text, which posits a more positive approach to the process and realities of aging and… Read more
A simple musical instrument of the Alpine shepherds, the alphorn became a source of fascination for travelers in the 19th century. As a result, it became a symbol of musical tradition in Switzerland. Thanks to its soothing sound and the unique visual appearance of the instrument, alphorn music is enjoying growing popularity, interestingly also in the Seattle region. We demonstrate historical and new alphorn music and get to the bottom of questions such as: What music can be played on a wind… Read more
Professor Frederike Middelhoff is this year’s distinguished Max Kade Visiting Professor from the Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main. In Frankfurt am Main, Dr. Frederike Middelhoff works as a professor of romantic-era German literature, leads a wide variety of interdisciplinary research groups, and holds several editorial and advisory positions. She is currently working on a Handbook for Literature and Ecology (… Read more
Following his inaugural year on faculty in our department, Assistant Professor J. Rafael Balling has been awarded a Frankel Institute Fellowship at the Frankel Institute for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan. The Frankel is among academia’s most prestigious fellowships in the area of interdisciplinary Jewish Studies. Each year’s Fellows, who remain in residence at UM for the duration of the fellowship, work… Read more
Hello all! My name is Lizzie Feir and I am a PR representative for the German Club! I'm a Junior at UW double majoring in International Studies and Economics. German Club meets Mondays 5pm in Denny 359; it's a great opportunity to practice German, learn more about German culture, and make lifelong friends! While participation is fun, if you're looking to be productive and add to your CV, some of our officers are graduating so positions are opening up! My personal experience with… Read more
Moin, or should I risk sounding garrulous and write: “Moin Moin” instead? As this year’s DAAD Teaching Assistant, I have now spent almost three wonderful quarters—which translates to almost three wonderful(ly rainy) seasons—at the University of Washington. As with any experience abroad that disrupts our habitual ways of going about life and in abiding to cliché and cheesy accounts on living abroad, I am writing candidly when I say that my time in Seattle and at the University of Washington… Read more
Traurig, aber wahr: My year in Seattle is slowly but surely coming to an end and it’s not long before I get on my flight back home to Germany. I arrived in Seattle back in September 2023 as this year’s Münster exchange student, not knowing what to expect from my time, my work and the people I would meet here at the University of Washington. I needn’t have worried though, since everyone at the German Department welcomed me with open arms from the beginning, starting quite literally from the… Read more
On March 29-30, an extraordinary opportunity for graduate students from across the humanities to share their research, learn from peers, engage with leading scholars, and network took place in our backyard. Supported by the Simpson Center for the Humanities, the Hanauer Seminar, and the Yoshino cherry trees who graciously reached peak bloom over that weekend, the Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference was coordinated and produced exclusively by UW grad students, including enthusiastic co… Read more
As you think about autumn quarter 2024 course registration, check out these fun English-language courses in German Studies!  Open to everyone -- no prerequisites! Campus Tour: A Multicultural Introduction to German Studies GERMAN 120A Modern research universities like the UW are a 19th-century German invention. This course provides an introduction to the modern university,… Read more
 

Your donation helps us to:

Engage important speakers and scholars for public events. Provide research support for our graduate students. Subsidize tuition for our summer programs. Fund student and faculty participation in conferences. For more info about our featured funds and to make a donation click HERE.

If you would like to share your story or any news about recent projects, publications or travels, please contact the newsletter editor, Misha Neininger at nein@uw.edu  
 
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