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Whitman Week in Chicago, June 24-29, 2013

Students are invited to apply for the 6th Whitman Week in Chicago - a complete credit-bearing seminar on one of America's most innovative and influential poets, taught by international specialists.
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American Guest Professor in Bamberg

In April 2013, American scholar and writer Tom Whalen will join our institute as international guest professor. He will teach 4 seminars (PS/ HS) on American literature and culture that are open to all students in our BA, MA and Lehramt programs.
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One Week in Paris: American Modernism in the French Capital

During a 5-day exursion, students explored the many connections between American Literature and Modernist Art in Paris during the 'Roaring Twenties.'
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Exploring Neuschwanstein and Hohenschwangau

Schloss Neuschwanstein and Canada - for the participants of the seminar “Germans in Canadian Literature and Culture” this connection became perfectly clear when they went on a field trip to Southern Bavaria to explore two castles of ‘mad’ king Ludwig II.
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Antrittsvorlesung Prof. Dr. Christine Gerhardt

Am 22.10.2012 hielt Christine Gerhardt, Inhaberin der Professur für Amerikanistik, ihre Antrittsvorlesung an der Universität Bamberg. Zum Vortrag "Disequilibrium Poetics: Migration und Ökologie in der amerikanischen Gegenwartsliteratur" und zum anschließenden Empfang erschienen zahlreiche Studierende und Kolleg/innen.
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Bibliothekstutorien im SoSe 2013

Informationen zu Inhalten, Terminen und Anmeldemodalitäten der verpflichtenden Bibliothekstutorien zu den "Introductions to English and American Literature" sowie zu den Seminaren im Aufbaumodul
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Erste Staatsprüfung (mündlich) an öffentlichen Schulen

Informationen für Studierende, die ihre erste Staatsprüfung ablegen wollen.
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News

American Guest Professor in Bamberg

In April 2013, American scholar and writer Tom Whalen will join our institute as international guest professor. In order to find out more about Tom Whalen, please see 

Dr. Whalen will teach 4 seminars (PS/ HS) on American literature and culture that are open to all students in our BA, MA and Lehramt programs. For more details on reading materials, please consult Univis (SoSe 2013).

Germany Through the American Cinematic Eye (PS Cult)

Time and Place: Wed 12:00 - 16:00, U9/01.11

In this course we will examine films that reflect on Germany during the era of National Socialism by such American directors as Borzage, Hitchcock, Welles, and Peckinpah, as well as directors from the German diaspora including Lubitsch, Lang, and Wilder. Careful attention will be given to the relationship between a film’s cinematic elements and its themes.

American Noir Fiction, Female Style (HS Lit or Cult)

Time and Place: Tue 18:00 - 20:00, MG1/02.06

Pulp crime fiction during the first two decades after WWII wasn’t limited to male writers, and not every femme was fatale. This course will examine five crime novels by women (Dorothy Hughes, Margaret Millar, Evelyn Piper, Shirley Jackson, Patricia Highsmith), their takes on postwar America and the cultural issues associated with pulp fiction.

Major Issues in American Cultural Thought: Hermann Melville's "Benito Cereno" and Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man (HS Lit or Cult)

Time and Place: Wed 8:00 - 10:00, U5/00.24

The issue of race in American culture, specifically African American culture (from slavery to Brer Rabbit to American jazz), will be explored through a close study of these two essential texts of American thought.

Paranoid in the 1950s and 1960s: Novelists and Filmmakers of the Postwar Era (HS Lit or Cult)

Block seminar: May 24/25 and June 14/15. Time and Room t.b.a.

As David Cochran notes in his study America Noir: Underground Writers and Filmmakers of the Postwar Era, in the 1950s and 60s modernism's oppositional tendencies were quickly co-opted by the cultural arbiters, that is, "the servants of the state." As a consequence, many of the significant writers and directors of the period went underground, into the disreputable genres of crime, science fiction, and horror.

This course focuses on four novels (The Killer Inside Me - Thompson, Beast in View Millar, The Crying of Lot 49 Pynchon, It Happened in Boston? Greenan) and four films (Angel Face Preminger, Bigger than Life Ray, Kiss Me Deadly Aldrich, The Birds Hitchcock) from a time "steeped in paranoia with humans at the mercy of vast forces beyond their control [. . .] a world both recognizable and frighteningly unfamiliar."