Queen Mary University, 10-11. November 2010
Sie können die englische Broschüre hier downloaden.
Diese internationale Konferenz beabsichtigt einen bedeutenden Beitrag im Forschungsbereich von Nationalismus und Antisemitismus im englischsprachigen und deutschen Kontext zwischen 1871 und 1945 zu leisten. Die Veranstaltung wird ein wichtiger Schritt im vielversprechenden interdisziplinären Austausch von Wissenschaftler aus den Bereichen Diskursanalyse, Politik- und Geschichtswissenschaft sein. Außerdem wird die Konferenz die Gelegenheit bieten, eine internationale Historical Discourse Working Group zu bilden, welche sich auch nach diesem Event regelmäßig treffen wird.
Hauptredner: Prof. Ruth Wodak (Lancaster University) und Prof. Andreas Musolff (University of East Anglia).
Konferenzkoordinatoren: Professor Felicity Rash, Dr. Geraldine Horan, Dr. Daniel Wildmann and Dr. Stefan Baumgarten, in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Leo Baeck Institute (London) und dem Centre for Anglo-German Cultural Relations (Queen Mary, University of London).
Kontaktinformationen:
Dr Stefan Baumgarten
Queen Mary, University of London
School of Languages, Linguistics and Film
327 Mile End Road, London E1 4NS
Tel.: 0044-(0)20-7882-5284
Handy: 0044-(0)7506-120815
s.baumgarten@qmul.ac.uk
http://www.sllf.qmul.ac.uk/research/nationalismproject/conference/index.html
Programm
Mittwoch Vormittag – 10. November 2010
9:30: ANMELDUNG & ERFRISCHUNGEN (ARTS FOYER)
10:00: BEGRÜSSUNG (ARTS LECTURE THEATRE):
Professor Felicity Rash; Dr. Daniel Wildmann
SESSION 1
10:30: Jan Vermeiren (University College London): Germania Irredenta: The Place of Großdeutschland in Weimar Nationalism
11:00: Helen Roche (University of Cambridge): “In Sparta fühlte ich mich wie in einer deutschen Stadt” (Goebbels): The Leaders of the Third Reich and the Spartan Nationalist Paradigm
11:30: Stefanie Schrader (Freie Universität Berlin): “German, Völkisch and Free” – The Deutschvölkische Freiheitspartei and the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic
12:00: Simone Borgstede (Universität Lüneburg): Dr. Ernst Henrici – Just a “Well-known Arsonist” of the German Kaiserreich or Foreman in the Production of an Aryan Volksgemeinschaft?
SESSION 2:
10:30: Christopher König (University of Kampen, Netherlands): Arthur Bonus: A Religious Author between Liberal Protestantism and Radical Nationalism
11:00: Daniel Siemens (Universität Bielefeld): Religious Ideas and Nationalistic Propaganda: The War Sermons of Ludwig Wessel and German Political Culture 1914-1934
11:30: Isabelle Engelhardt (Universität Düsseldorf): A Political Catholic View: Discourses on “the Jew Question” and “Deutschtum” in the Daily Paper Germania 1918-1933
12:00: Diana Jane Beech (University of Cambridge): Landesbischöfe Marahrens, Meiser and Wurm and the Impact of the Judenfrage on the German Protestant Church
12:30 MITTAGSPAUSE
Mittwoch Nachmittag – 10. November 2010
SESSION 3:
13:30: Stefan Hüpping (Universität Osnabrück): “An Issue of Antisemitism” – Adolf Bartels vs. Friedrich v. Oppeln-Bronikowski
14:00: Matthew Fitzpatrick (Flinders University, Australia): A Jewish Question? The Expulsion of Non-Germans from Prussia, 1881-1886
14:30: Brian Crim (Lynchburg College, Virginia): The Case for “Situational Antisemitism”: Antisemitic Discourse and the German Paramilitary Community, 1919-1933
15:00: Anja Lobenstein-Reichmann (Universität Trier): Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Hitler’s Chief Ideologue, Alfred Rosenberg: Two Cornerstones of the Racial Discourse of the 20th Century
SESSION 4:
13:30: Lara Day (University of Edinburgh): Writing German Identity on the Landscape: Paul Schultze-Naumburg’s Die Entstellung unseres Landes
14:00: Tracey Reimann-Dawe (Durham University): Anglo-German Tensions on African Soil and the Rise of German Nationalism during the German Colonial Era
14:30: Elaine Martin (National University of Ireland Maynooth): “Colonial Fantasies” in Interwar German Literature
15:00: Tamara Gella (Orel State University, Russia): National and Colonial Ideas in English Liberals’ Political Discourse of the Late 19th Century
15:30: KAFFEE / TEE
SESSION 5:
16:00: Nicolas Bechter (Universität Wien): Anti-Semitism and Romantic Anti-Capitalism in the Austrian Parliament between 1870-1914
16:30: Christine Achinger (University of Warwick) & Marcel Stoetzler (The University of Manchester): The Convergence of ‘Civic’ and ‘Ethnic’ Nationalism in Liberal Antisemitism: The Cases of Freytag and Treitschke
17:00: Michael Carter-Sinclair (King’s College London): Antisemitism and German Nationalism in Vienna: The Long Period to 1938
17:30: Christopher Hutton (The University of Hong Kong): Race Theory as a Critique of Nationalism in the Context of European Anti-Semitism
SESSION 6:
16:00: Jens-Uwe Guettel (The Pennsylvania State University): “How Petty do the Romans’ Creations Appear Compared to the Global Achievements of the Anglo-Saxons”: England in German Nationalist and Expansionist Discourse, 1871-1914
16:30: Mara Degnan-Rojeski (Dickinson College, Pennsylvania): From Nationalism to National Socialism: The English-language Propaganda of the Deutscher Fichte Bund
17:00: Grzegorz Krzywiec (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland): On the Term ‘Judaization (Verjudung/Zażydzenie)’ in Political Catholicism. Some Cases of East Central European Elective Affinities
17:30: Lisa Konietzni (Universität Düsseldorf): The Linguistically Reflexive Discussion of the CV-Zeitung about Anti-Semitic Stereotypes, Metaphors and Compounds
18:30: GRUNDSATZREDE (ARTS LECTURE THEATRE): RUTH WODAK (LANCASTER UNIVERSITY): The Discourse of Syncretic Antisemitism: “Anything Goes!”
20:00: ABENDESSEN
Donnerstag Vormittag – 11. November 2010
SESSION 7:
9:00: Christian Koller (Bangor University): The Concept of ‘Fremdherrschaft’ in German Nationalist and Anti-Semitic Discourses, 1871-1945
9:30: Lisa Zwicker (Indiana University): Student Antisemites: The Union of German Students [Verein deutscher Studenten], 1880-1914
10:00: Ulrich Charpa (Universität Bochum): Music and Science. On Some Similarities between Antisemitic Discourses in German-speaking Contexts
10:30: Stephanie Seul (Universität Bremen): Discourses of the British Press on German Anti-Semitism in the Early Weimar Republic, 1918-1923
SESSION 8:
9:00: Jonas Karlsson (Yale University): The Struggle for Victimhood: The Case of Bernhard Förster
9:30: Falco Pfalzgraf (Queen Mary): Juden, Neger und Zigeuner. Minority Groups in German Fibeln 1933-1945
10:00: Katharina Barbe (Northern Illinois University): Puzzles as Text and Discourse
10:30: Nicola Hille (Universität Tübingen): “Greetings from Marienbad”: Anti-Semitic Postcards in the Kaiserreich
11:00: KAFFEE / TEE
11:30: GRUNDSATZREDE (ARTS LECTURE THEATRE): ANDREAS MUSOLFF (UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA): How to Identify the Enemy of the German Body Politic: Carl Schmitt’s Nationalist “Concept of the Political”
12:30: MITTAGSPAUSE
Donnerstag Nachmittag – 11. November 2010
SESSION 9:
13:30: Lara Trubowitz (The University of Iowa): Wyndham Lewis and the Artfulness of Antisemitism, or Redefining British Tolerance in an Era of Refugees
14:00: David Lebovitch Dahl (University of Copenhagen): Varieties of Nationalist Antisemitism in Germany and England: A Comparison between the Discourses of the Jesuit Journals Stimmen der Zeit and The Month 1918-1939
14:30: Ulrike Ehret (Universität Erlangen): The Crux with Modernity: The Nationalism and Antisemitism of the Catholic Right in Germany and England
14:00: Magnus Brechtken (The University of Nottingham): English-German Anti-Semitism and the Idea of ‘Compulsory Segregation’
SESSION 10:
13:30: Egbert Klautke (University College London): Wilhelm Wundt and the Mind of the Nation during the First World War
14:00: Felix Wiedemann (Freie Universität Berlin): The Double Orient: Jews and Arabs in the Racial Theory of Ludwig Ferdinand Clauß
14:30: Karin Stögner (Central European University, Budapest): On Antisemitism and Nationalism at the Fin de Siècle: Walter Benjamin’s Critique of German Youth Movement
15:00: Ana Petrov (University of Belgrade): Being German, Being ‘More Rationalized’: The Case of Max Weber’s Concept of Rationalization in Music
15:30: KAFFEE / TEE
SESSION 11:
16:00: Daniel Tilles (Royal Holloway, University of London): “Jewish Decay Against British Revolution”: The British Union of Fascists’ Antisemitic Discourse in the Context of Fascist and British Nationalist Thought
16:30: Russell Wallis (Royal Holloway, University of London): Memory and Nationalism on the British Left: The Good and Bad German Controversy in Britain
SESSION 12:
16:00: Martin Weidinger (Universität Wien): Fridericus, Bismarck and Cromwell: Historical Narratives as Part of a Nationalist Project?
16:30: Birte Förster (Technische Universität Darmstadt): Inventing their Tradition – Right-wing Female Leaders and the Queen Louise-Myth, 1923-1936
Ab 17:00: ABSCHLUSSBEMERKUNGEN & WEINEMPFANG (ARTS FOYER)