Nov 21 – Obama Lecture with Obama Dissertation Prize & Galinsky Prize 🗓

Nov 21 – Obama Lecture with Obama Dissertation Prize & Galinsky Prize 🗓

Nov 21, 2024 – 10.00-13.00 – Obama Lecture – Fakultätssaal (Philosophicum, 01-185)

Please join us for our annual Obama Lecture a week after Thanksgiving, where we will highlight outstanding work in Transnational American Studies – with a contribution from our current Obama Fellow Dr. Renae Watchman (Associate Professor of Indigenous Studies, McMaster University, Canada) – and show appreciation for the work of young scholars by awarding the Obama Dissertation Prize as well as the Hans Galinsky Memorial Prize for student and graduate theses.

Everyone is welcome!

Please see the flyer below for details or download it here.

November 2024 – Guest Lectures by Obama Fellow Dr. Renae Watchman 🗓

November 2024 – Guest Lectures by Obama Fellow Dr. Renae Watchman 🗓

 

Obama Fellow Guest Lectures

Dr. Renae Watchman

Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies
McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

Nov 5, 14-16 in P 109a (Philosophicum)

Indigenous Literary Arts in the German Studies Curriculum: Centering Otherwise.

Suggested reading: German Studies Review, 47.1 (2024): 145–158 and short story “In 1864” by Luci Tapahonso.

Nov 12, 16-18 in 00.212 (Philosophicum II)

Hane’tonomy (Narrative Autonomy) in Contemporary Diné Film and Young Adult Literatures

Nov 18, 10-12 in P 5 (Philosophicum)

Guest lecture in the lecture course “Life Writing”

Nov 21, 10-13 in 01-185 (Fakultätssaal, Philosophicum)

Hane’tonomy: Restoring/Re-storying Diné Presence and Futurisms with Hózhǫ́

Keynote lecture during the annual Obama Lecture event; more details on the event will follow.

 

You can download the poster for the series here.

Nov 12 – Guest Lecture “Spirituality in Black Independent Magazines” 🗓

Nov 12 – Guest Lecture “Spirituality in Black Independent Magazines” 🗓

Zoë Wydra
(JGU Mainz)

 

“Spirituality in Black Independent Magazines”

 

Nov 12, 2024, 18:15-19:45, P 109a (Philosophicum)

 

Magazines as bodies – human bodies. Alive. Breathing, moving. Preaching. In this lecture, we will look at Black independent magazines as spiritual bodies. In fact, magazines like CRWN, Womanly, and HANNAH become spiritual leaders whose teachings are ubiquitous in their pages, though not necessarily obvious.
In their missions to represent authentic Black women, these magazines depict as well as build a Black female community. This focus on strengthening the larger Black community sets the indies apart from mainstream publications, which tend to focus on individuals’ achievements and exceptionalism.
Based on Christian and African-based spiritualities, African Americans have forged a unique spirituality in which knowledge of the interwovenness of all things and beings, dead or alive, is crucial. Thus, we will see how selected Black independent magazines spiritually guide the Black individual into community, inspired by the belief that the self is most authentic, free and self-actualized when in relation.

You can download the poster for the event here.

 
Nov 6 – Guest Lecture “U.S. Imperialism in Haiti and African American Women’s Writing” 🗓

Nov 6 – Guest Lecture “U.S. Imperialism in Haiti and African American Women’s Writing” 🗓

Katharina Weygold
(Brown University)

 

“A Real Sense of Duty”:
U.S. Imperialism in Haiti and African American Women’s Writing

 

Nov 6, 2024, 12:15-13:45, P 204 (Philosophicum)

This lecture offers insight into the U.S. occupation of Haiti (1915-1934) and the complex ways in which African American women engaged with Haitian history during the occupation. It explores how Anna Julia Cooper’s and Harriet Gibbs Marshall’s historical writing challenged the dominant discourse about Haiti, which undergirded the occupation. Reading their work in the context of U.S. imperialism abroad and racial segregation and violence at home, it examines how Cooper and Marshall negotiated their own ideas about and relationships to empire, racial uplift, and diasporic solidarity.

Katharina Weygold (she/her) is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of American Studies at Brown University. In her dissertation, Katharina studies African American women’s ideas about Haiti and their activism, writing, performances, artwork, and interactions and collaborations with Haitians in the context of U.S. imperialism in Haiti from the U.S. occupation (1915 – 1934) to the Duvalier regime (1957 – 1986). Drawing on archival sources and oral histories, the project explores how focusing on women changes our understanding of the meaning of Haiti and U.S. imperialism for African Americans. Katharina holds an M.A. in Public Humanities from Brown University and an M.A. in American Studies from Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany.

 

You can download the poster for the event here.

Direct Exchange – Info Sessions 2024 for Programs in 2025/26 🗓

Direct Exchange – Info Sessions 2024 for Programs in 2025/26 🗓

On Nov 6 the Obama Institute will hold an info session on its Direct Exchange programs. Please join us in room P 2 (Philosophicum) for more information about the exciting exchange opportunities!

Nov 6, 18:15-19:45
P 2 (Philosophicum)

Please find all details about the session on the flyer, which is available for download here and on the Exchange page, where you can also browse general information on the programs in order to get a headstart on what your options are and what an application would entail.

Looking forward to talking to you in person on Nov 6, when we will be happy to answer all your questions!

Anne Bull, Sandra Meerwein, Samira Deq, and Julia Velten