Waiting for a Copernican Turn: Public and NGO Theaters in Warsaw April 14, 2025 – Paweł Płoski as part of the Webinar series "Whose City?" Info: https://t.co/M2XlkhD2lS
Considerations on the Berlin Theater Situation: 35 Years Later March 10, 2025 – Brandon Woolf - as part of the webinar series "Whose City?" Info: https://t.co/M2XlkhD2lS
Join us for Grimm Lecture 2025, an in-depth exploration of Kafka’s enduring global influence—from Weimar Berlin to the modern literary world. 🌍📖
📅 Thu., Feb. 27, 7–10 PM (EST)📍CIGI Auditorium, Balsillie School / via Zoom
🔗 Registration: https://t.co/lFqbtKGAnZ
In Search of the People: Public Theatre in France since 1945 - February 10, 2025 – Marjorie Glas as part of the Webinar series "Whose City?" Info: https://t.co/M2XlkhD2lS
Join us for Grimm Lecture 2025, an in-depth exploration of Kafka’s enduring global influence—from Weimar Berlin to the modern literary world. 🌍📖
📅 Thu., Feb. 27, 7–10 PM (EST)📍CIGI Auditorium, Balsillie School / via Zoom
🔗 Registration: https://t.co/lFqbtKGAnZ
Don't miss this out! Check out the courses of the CSSG and spend this summer in Germany while improving your language skills☀️
💻 Join the virtual info session
(Monday, Jan. 27 11:30 am)
https://t.co/gIiJ46B7oY
‼️Application Deadline: 31.01.2025
@utpress@UofMPress@berghahnbooks Jonas Tinius. State of the Arts: An Ethnography of German Theatre and Migration. (@CambridgeUP)
Read more about the prize and all the authors on our website: https://t.co/6StsgJy2Ca 7/7
In case you missed it, we announced the shortlist and winner of our 2023 WCGS Book Prize in late December!
The winner is Dr. Andrea Rottmann for Queer Lives across the Wall: Desire and Danger in Divided Berlin, 1945–1970. (@utpress) Congratulations Dr. Rottmann! 1/
Are you an early-career researcher in Germany or the UK? You still have the chance to apply for our interdisciplinary Frontiers of Humanities Symposium in Berlin! Deadline is 8 January.
More information 👇