Accepting Applications for GERST 2700 Introduction to German Culture and Thought (Fall 2024)

GERST 2700 | “Introduction to German Culture and Thought”
 

Big names, Big ideas, and Big events are associated with German culture and thought: Luther, Faust, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Mozart, Beethoven, Kant, Hegel, Goethe, Einstein, Kafka and Thomas Mann; Enlightenment; World Wars and Reunification; European Union, and Migration and Refugees:  In this course, we shall cover the broad spectrum of both the long tradition of German culture and thought, and examine the wide range of political, literary, sociological, and artistic topics, themes, and questions that are of urgent contemporary concern for Germany, Europe, and beyond. Guest lecturers will introduce you to the wide and exciting field of German Studies. Topics include: the age of enlightenment; literatures of migration and minorities; avant-garde art; philosophy, aesthetics, and critical theory; Weimar and War; Holocaust and its Aftermath; film and media; genres of literature: novel, novella, short story, lyric poetry, anecdote, autobiography; literature and politics; literature and the environment; digital humanities and literatures/fictions of cyber space. In addition, this course will introduce you to the techniques of critical analysis and writing. Authors include among many others: Goethe, Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche, Adorno, Freud, Kafka, Kluge, Marx, Thomas Mann, Kracauer, Benjamin. 
 

MW 11:40-12:55, E. Siegel
 

Enrollment limited to: 18 first semester first-year students. All interested students are invited to apply online or in writing to instructor: Professor Elke Siegel, Department of German Studies, 183 Goldwin Smith Hall. Email any questions Undergraduate Coordinator Anne Chen at [email protected]. Upon availability, sophomores will be welcome to apply.
 

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Students study near the statue of Ezra Cornell on the Arts Quad in fall. Students gathered next to the Ezra Cornell statue.
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