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E-raamat: Transatlantic German Studies: Testimonies to the Profession

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The prominent scholar-contributors to this volume share their experiences developing the field of US German Studies and their thoughts on literature and interdisciplinarity, pluralism and diversity, and transatlantic dialogue.





The decisive contribution of the exile generation of the 1930s and '40s to German Studies in the United States is well known. The present volume carries the story forward to the next generation(s), giving voice to scholars from the US and overseas, many of them mentored by the exile generation. The exiles knew vividly the value of the Humanities; the following generations, though spared the experience of historical catastrophe, have found formidable challenges in building and maintaining the field in a time increasingly dismissive of that value. The scholar-contributors to this volume, prominent members of the profession, share their experiences of finding their way in the field and helping to develop it to its present state as well as their thoughts on its present challenges, including the question of the role of literature and of interdisciplinarity, pluralism, and diversity. Of particular interest is therole of transatlantic dialogue.

Contributors: Leslie A. Adelson, Hans Adler, Russell A. Berman, Jane K. Brown, Walter Hinderer, Robert C. Holub, Leroy Hopkins, Andreas Huyssen, Claire Kramsch, Wilhelm Krull, Paul Michael Lützeler, Mark W. Roche, Judith Ryan, Azade Seyhan, Lynne Tatlock, Liliane Weissberg.

Paul Michael Lützeler is Rosa May Distinguished University Professor in the Humanities at Washington University, St. Louis. PeterHöyng is Associate Professor of German at Emory University.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(4)
Paul Michael Lutzeler
Peter Hoyng
From Erfahrungshunger to Realitatshunger: Futurity, Migration, and Difference
5(18)
Leslie A. Adelson
In-between: The Participant as Observer---The Observer as Participant
23(14)
Hans Adler
Transatlantic Space and My Own History of Globalization
37(19)
Russell A. Berman
Deplazierte Personen: Why Would an American Become a Germanist?
56(15)
Jane K. Brown
Metamorphoses and Meanderings of a Wanderer between Worlds
71(15)
Walter Hinderer
German Studies as Vocation: My Path into It, Out of It, and Back into It
86(20)
Robert C. Holub
My Long Way from Germanistik to Afro German Studies
106(18)
Leroy Hopkins
Mustang Red: My American Road to Critical Theory
124(20)
Andreas Huyssen
Third Place: How a French Germanist Became an Applied Linguist in America
144(16)
Claire Kramsch
Transatlantic Exchanges: German Studies---European and American Style
160(21)
Paul Michael Lutzeler
Being at Home in the Other: Thoughts and Tales from a Typically Atypical Germanist
181(17)
Mark W. Roche
After Australia: Triangulating an Intellectual Journey
198(17)
Judith Ryan
A Tale in Translation: An Academic Itinerary from Istanbul to Bryn Mawr
215(16)
Azade Seyhan
Beyond Passing: Transculturation in "Contact Zones"
231(18)
Lynne Tatlock
Far from Where? Germanistik between the Continents
249(16)
Liliane Weissberg
Epilogue: The Usefulness of Useless Studies 265(16)
Wilhelm Krull
Index 281
PAUL MICHAEL LUETZELER is the Rosa May Distinguished University Professor in the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis where he has been teaching courses in German and Comparative Literature PETER HÖYNG is Professor of German at Emory University. LYNNE TATLOCK is the Hortense and Tobias Lewin Distinguished Professor in the Humanities and Chair of Germanic Languages and Literatures at Washington University in St. Louis, MO. PAUL MICHAEL LUETZELER is the Rosa May Distinguished University Professor in the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis where he has been teaching courses in German and Comparative Literature PETER HÖYNG is Professor of German at Emory University.