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Retrospect

Promoting dialogue between scholars and the public, the Heidelberg Center for American Studies offers a wide range of informative events to its audience.

In case you were unable to attend an event, these pages give you the opportunity to inform yourself about the main arguments and results of the debates and talks.

This page will provide a retrospect of selected recent events in chronological order. A retrospect of earlier events can be found in our retrospect archive.

Panel Discussion: "Zukunft der Arbeit – Chancen und Risiken der Digitalisierung" (HCA Economics Month)

July 9, 2019 | by Andreas Balz

Welche Veränderungen sind von der fortschreitenden Digitalisierung der Arbeitswelt zu erwarten? Wie wird sie sich auf unsere Gesellschaft auswirken? Welche Voraussetzungen braucht es um ein günstiges Klima für digitale Innovationen zu schaffen? Und kann Deutschland am Beispiel Silicon Valley etwas für die Zukunft lernen? Zur Abschlussveranstaltung des Economics Month hatte das HCA gleich drei Gäste geladen — aus Wirtschaft, Politik und Wissenschaft — die bei einer Podiumsdiskussion diese und andere Fragen aus unterschiedlichen Perspektiven näher beleuchten sollten.

...read more on the HCA Graduate Blog!

Paul Harvey: "That Which Is God In Us: Howard Thurman and American Religion in the 20th Century"

July 2, 2019

This year, the HCA and the Faculty of Theology bestowed the eighth James W.C. Pennington Award upon Paul Harvey, Professor of History and Presidential Teaching Fellow at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. Professor Beatrix Busse, prorector of Heidelberg University, greeted the guests in the packed Atrium of the HCA and dwelled briefly on the origins of the award that enables its recipient to spend a few weeks teaching and researching at the Ruperto Carola. Funded by the Manfred Lautenschläger Foundation, the award stands for the values the fugitive slave and Heidelberg University share: It acknowledges scholars whose work sheds light on African-American culture, history, and education. Dr. h.c. Manfred Lautenschläger then gave a brief introduction to the life of James W. C. Pennington, followed by Professor Jan Stievermann’s laudatio on this year’s recipient.

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Michèle Mendelssohn: "Life Imitates Art, or: The True History of Oscar Wilde’s American Tour and Transatlantic 19th-century Racism"

June 27, 2019

On June 27, Michèle Mendelssohn continued the Baden-Wurttemberg Seminar with her lecture on Oscar Wilde’s American tour. Professor Günter Leypoldt of Heidelberg University’s English Department introduced the guest, who has a long-standing connection with Germany. She spent many summers learning German and working jobs on an island in the North Sea. After her graduation from Concordia University in Canada, a visiting scholarship brought her to Heidelberg University where she studied German literature. In 1999, she went to Cambridge University to earn her M.Phil. and Ph.D. in American and English literature. Today, Mendelssohn is a literary critic, cultural historian, and member of Oxford’s English Faculty.

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Barbara Savage: "Merze Tate: A Black Scholar’s International Thought on War, Race, and Anti-Imperialism"

June 25, 2019

The Baden-Württemberg Seminar continued on Tuesday, June 25 with a talk by Barbara Savage, Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought at the University of Pennsylvania and Harmsworth Visiting Professor of American History at Oxford University. Dr. Anja Schüler, coordinator of the Baden-Württemberg Seminar, was delighted to welcome Professor Savage at the HCA and introduced the audience to her academic career. In her lecture, Professor Savage shed light on the life and work of twentieth-century African-American scholar Merze Tate, who in spite of her academic and personal achievements received growing public recognition only after her death in 1996.

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Panel Discussion: "Is American Democracy Endangered?"

June 19, 2019

On June 19, the HCA hosted a panel discussion to celebrate its fifteen-year anniversary and the eightieth birthday of its founding director Professor Detlef Junker. Friends of the institution and other guests gathered at the New University’s Manfred Lautenschläger Lecture Hall for a panel discussion about the resilience of American democracy. Professor Welf Werner, director of the HCA, opened the evening with a retrospect of his predecessor’s long career that looked back on his academic successes and his achievements as a talented academic entrepreneur.

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John Komlos: "The Economic History of Trumpism" (HCA Economics Month)

June 18, 2019 | by Natalie Rauscher

The Heidelberg Center for American Studies was glad to welcome the distinguished Prof. emeritus John Komlos during Tuesday’s evening lecture. Komlos was scheduled to talk about “The Economic History of Trumpism” and immediately made clear that he was glad to visit Heidelberg but that the purpose of his visit was not a happy one.

...read more on the HCA Graduate Blog!

Edward Lengel: "Public History, Public Memory: Pivotal Moments and How They Are Remembered"

June 13, 2019

On June 13, the Baden-Württemberg Seminar continued in cooperation with the U.S. Embassy in Berlin and the chair for public history at Heidelberg University with a guest lecture by Edward Lengel, the 2018-19 Revolutionary in Residence at Colonial Williamsburg. Dr. Anja Schüler, coordinator of the Baden-Württemberg Seminar, briefly introduced Dr. Lengel, whose positions as professor for history at the University of Virginia and Chief Historian for the White House Historical Association led him to his work as public historian.

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Robert Zoellick: "The Changing Global Economic Geography" (HCA Economics Month)

June 11, 2019 | by Maren Schäfer

As part of the Economics Month, the HCA and the Alfred-Weber-Institute for Economics welcomed Robert Zoellick to Heidelberg. Robert Zoellick is Senior Counselor at Brunswick Geopolitical, an advisory service of Brunswick Group, a Senior Fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard University, and serves on the boards of multiple companies. He was the President of the World Bank (2007-2012), U.S. Trade Representative (2001-2005), Deputy Secretary of State (2005-2006), and Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury and Under Secretary of State, as well as the White House Deputy Chief of Staff (1985-1993). Mr. Zoellick also led the US Delegation to the two plus four talks on German reunification and had therefore requested to discuss the German unification with German students during a seminar. In the evening, he gave a lecture on The Changing Global Economic Geography.

...read more on the HCA Graduate Blog!

Barry Eichengreen: "The Populist Temptation: Economic Grievance and Political Reaction in America" (HCA Economics Month)

May 29, 2019 | by Aline Schmidt

Over the next few weeks, the Heidelberg Center for American Studies is hosting its first Economics Month with a number of events discussing economic perspectives on the United States – from changes in global economic geography or the future of work in the US to the interweaving of populist surges and economic turbulences. To kick it off, the HCA has collaborated with the Economics Department and the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany to welcome economic historian Barry Eichengreen to Heidelberg. Eichengreen currently holds the George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee Professorship of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. His work is balancing dedicated in-depth research, detailed observation, and careful documentation of patterns and fluctuations throughout the economic history of the West.

...read more on the HCA Graduate Blog!

Jon Coleman: "Nature Shock: Getting Lost in America"

May 23, 2019

On May 23, the HCA was delighted to welcome Professor Jon Coleman, Chair of the Department of History at Notre Dame University, to its Baden-Württemberg Seminar. Professor Jan Stievermann of Heidelberg University welcomed his colleague and gave the audience a brief introduction into his work. Professor Coleman got involved with the topic of his talk while researching the history of mobility in America before combustion engines, supported by a Guggenheim Fellowship. During this inquiry, he came across multiple intriguing stories about getting lost in America that lead him to look further into this phenomenon.

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Hugh Ryan: When Brooklyn Was Queer

May 16, 2019

On May 16, the HCA and an expectant audience welcomed author and queer historian Hugh Ryan from New York. In cooperation with the Heidelberg Queer Festival and the Graduiertenkolleg “Authority and Trust” (GKAT), Ryan presented his recent book When Brooklyn Was Queer in the Baden-Württemberg Seminar. Hugh Ryan’s professional background is as diverse and colorful as the subjects of his study. He writes the biweekly “Themstory” column as the resident historian at Conde Nast’s new LGBTQ magazine Them. He founded a pop-up museum of queer history in 2010, where he curates exhibitions at local communities and leads workshops on AIDS activism and LGBTQ history. Furthermore, he serves as the development associate at the Urban Justice Center, as a consultant for New York City’s queer experimental film festival, and as an expert on the literary origin of zombies.

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Hartmut Rosa: "Charisma als Resonanzbeziehung"

May 9, 2019

On 9 May 2019, the Graduiertenkolleg “Authority and Trust” (GKAT) welcomed sociologist Hartmut Rosa at the Heidelberg Center for American Studies (HCA); Hartmut Rosa is professor of general and theoretical sociology at Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena and director of the Max-Weber-Kolleg at Erfurt University. Professor Günter Leypoldt gave an introduction to Hartmut Rosa’s main area of research: Hartmut Rosa’s talk was based on his influential monograph Resonanz: Eine Soziologie der Weltbeziehung, which was published in 2016 and builds upon his earlier publication Beschleunigung: Die Veränderung der Zeitstrukturen in der Moderne from 2005. In his talk, Prof. Rosa focused on the connecting elements between the two concepts “charisma” and “resonance.”

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Sandra Gustafson: "Regeneration through Non-Violence: Cooper, Stowe, and the Politics of the Early Peace Movement"

April 30, 2019

The twenty-fifth Baden-Württemberg Seminar of the HCA continued on April 30 with a lecture by Sandra Gustafson. As Professor of English and American Studies at the University of Notre Dame’s English Department, Gustafson’s foci lie in American literature and culture, peace studies, and the study of civil and human rights. Her talk successfully integrated these scholarly specialties.

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David Greenberg: "Unpresidented: Liberalism, Democracy, and the Politics of Truth after the Election of Donald Trump" (HCA Commencement)

April 26, 2019

On April 26, the HCA celebrated its 2019 Commencement at Heidelberg University’s venerable Old Lecture Hall. Accompanied by the Collegium Musicum’s UniBrass Ensemble, 33 graduates of the B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. programs received their honors. The dean of the Faculty of Philosophy, Professor Stephan Westphalen, welcomed the graduates and guests and emphasized that the HCA had provided excellent education and research opportunities to their young scholars over the last fifteen years and would continue to do so. Following Professor Westphalen’s remarks, HCA Director Professor Welf Werner commenced his address to the graduates starting with the B.A. class of 2019. He pointed out that the free and independent education from which they had profited was no longer a self-evident privilege in Europe and the United States.

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Exhibition: "Woodstock and the Nation"

March 14 to April 26, 2019

August 2019 commemorates the fiftieth anniversary of the Woodstock Music & Art Fair, and the HCA celebrated this anniversary with an exhibition. More than thirty bands and solo artists of the folk, rock, psychedelic rock, blues, and country genre played in front of 400,000 visitors on a dairy farmer’s pasturelands near small-town Bethel, New York, from August 15 to 18, 1969. Among the artists were prominent musicians such as the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Canned Heat, Credence Clearwater Revival, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, The Who, Joan Baez, Joe Cocker, Arlo Guthrie, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Santana. Inclement weather and organizational problems caused somewhat chaotic conditions, but overall, the atmosphere was euphoric. Countless movies, books, posters, and photos immortalized the “Three Days of Peace & Music.” However, while it played a vital role in the festival’s music, the political dimension of Woodstock usually fades into the background.

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Panel Discussion: "Two Years of Trump – Transatlantic Partnership, quo vadis?"

January 30, 2019

On Wednesday, January 30, the University Group for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and the Heidelberg Center for American Studies invited the public to a panel discussion on the current state of the transatlantic partnership following the first two years of the Trump administration. Panelists Andrea Rotter from Hanns-Seidel-Foundation and Dr. David Sirakov, member of the Atlantic Academy, debated with Dr. Florian Böller and Dr. Martin Thunert, political scientists at the HCA, about the role of NATO and the future of the Iran Deal.

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Die Präsidenten der USA: 45 historische Porträts von George Washington bis Donald Trump (HCA Book Launch)

January 8, 2019

The HCA kicked off the New Year with a book launch of Die Präsidenten der USA: 45 historische Porträts von George Washington bis Donald Trump (The Presidents of the USA: 45 Historic Portraits from George Washington to Donald Trump). Contributing authors Professor Britta Waldschmidt-Nelson, professor for the history of European-transatlantic culture at the University of Augsburg, HCA Founding Director Professor Detlef Junker, Curt Engelhorn Professor Manfred Berg, and Dr. Martin Thunert, HCA Senior Lecturer for American politics, presented their short biographies to a large audience in the HCA Atrium. Dr. Wilfried Mausbach, moderator of the evening, emphasized that this work demonstrated how much a person’s biography could influence their political choices.

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