Nov 25 – Guest Lecture: Childrearing Discourses, Early U.S. Periodicals, and the THE MISSIONARY HERALD, 1810s 🗓

Nov 25 – Guest Lecture: Childrearing Discourses, Early U.S. Periodicals, and the THE MISSIONARY HERALD, 1810s 🗓

Guest Lecture by Layla Koch (University of Heidelberg)

“O that our Children”: Childrearing Discourses, Early U.S. Periodicals, and the The Missionary Herald, 1810s

November 25, 2025, 6-8pm, P 6 (Philosophicum)

The Panoplist, later renamed to The Missionary Herald, was more than a magazine detailing the projects of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. In the early 1800s, countless Protestant Americans relied on the popular monthly periodical to stay informed about broader benevolence in the Early Republic, establish affective, evangelistic communities, and discuss the most anxiety-inducing responsibility of the time: raising the first generation of U.S. Americans. By discussing childraising discourses in The Missionary Herald, this talk will demonstrate how early U.S. magazines effectively tied together the concerns of their readership and their own specialized interests at the dawn of the nineteenth-century print revolution.

Layla Koch is a third-year PhD candidate in American studies at the University of Heidelberg under the supervision of Jan Stievermann. Her project explores U.S. children’s roles and shifting understandings of childhood in the U.S. foreign missionary movement, 1810-1866. Layla has studied abroad at Yale Divinity School and Uppsala University, Sweden. Currently, she serves as the editor of Digital Childhoods, the companion blog of the Society for the History of Children and Youth.

You can download the poster for the event here.

Nov 20 – Film Screening / 30th Anniversary USA Library at JGU 🗓

Nov 20 – Film Screening / 30th Anniversary USA Library at JGU 🗓

Film screening of The Librarians at 6:30 p.m. on November 20 in the “Muschel,” lecture hall N3

 

This week the USA Library celebrates its 30th anniversary: On November 20, 1995, the Library for North America Studies first opened its doors at Mainz University.

The collection, originating from the holdings of the Camp Lindsey Library—an Air Force library in Wiesbaden—included numerous print media, journals, as well as digital databases and reference works. Since then, the library, now renamed the USA Library, has continued to grow and comprises more than 80,000 print media as well as access to digital newspapers, journals, and e-books. The Library, which is open to the public, contains to a wide range of literature on the history, culture, politics, and social aspects of the United States.

As part of the anniversary celebration, the University Library, in cooperation with the Obama Institute, will show the documentary The Librarians at 6:30 p.m. on November 20 in the “Muschel,” lecture hall N3.

The film covers the book bans at public schools in Texas.

More information can be found here About the Film – The Librarians Film | Official Site

There is also a small exhibition on book bans in the United States, located in the area between the GFG and the Central Library as well as in the AMA display case.