German Content Modules - Birkbeck, University of London
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German Content Modules - Birkbeck, University of London
German Content Modules 2016/17 Full Module Title: Cultural Perspectives on German History Module Code: AREL042S4 Credits/Level: Convenor: Lecturer(s): 30/4 Eckard Michels Eckard Michels, Peter Damrau, Anna Richards, John Walker, Alexander Weber, Joanne Leal None Entrance Requirements: Day/Time: Monday, 7.40-9.00 P.M. (Term 1 and 2) Module Description: This module aims to give you an introduction to the ways in which different cultural media have responded to some of the most significant events in German history since the 18th century. You are introduced to aspects of German history while at the same time learning a variety of interpretive skills appropriate to the analysis of different cultural artefacts. Syllabus: Term One Week 1: Historical background – Germany in the late 18th century (EM) Week 2: Cultural responses: Friedrich Schiller The Robbers (1781) and Don Carlos (1787) (PD) Week 3: Cultural responses: Friedrich Schiller The Robbers (1781) and Don Carlos (1787) (PD) Week 4: Cultural responses Friedrich Schiller The Robbers (1781) and Don Carlos (1787) (PD) Week 5: Historical background – Germany between Restoration and Revolution (1815-1848) (EM) Week 6: Reading week Week 7 to 9: Fictional response: in these three sessions we will look at Georg Büchner’s Hessian Messenger (1834) and Woyzeck (1836/37) (AR) Week 10: Historical background – The Revolution of 1918/19 (EM) Week 11: Response in drama: Ernst Toller Masse Mensch (JW) Term Two Week 1: Fictional response: Alfred Döblin November 1918 and Günter Grass My Century (JW) Week 2: Documentary evidence: Adolf Hitler and Rosa Luxemburg (JW) Week 3: Historical background – “Stunde Null” (Germany in 1945) (EM) Weeks 4: Oskar Barnack and the invention of modern photography (AW) Week 5: Visual history: Hermann Claasen’s photography of ruins (AW) Week 7: Literary responses to cities in ruins (AW) Week 8: Historical background – The collapse of the GDR and the reunification of Germany (1989/90) (EM) Weeks 9, 10 and 11: Cultural responses in film: Goodbye Lenin & Das Leben der Anderen (JL) Assessment: Essential Texts: Other Important Information: Assignment Essay 1 (due 7.11.2016) Essay 2 (due 16.1.2017) Essay 3 (due 16.4.2017) Essay 4 (due 3.5.2017) See syllabus Description 500 words Weighting 10% 500 words 10% 1500 words 40% 1500 words 40% Preparatory reading: Mary Fulbrook, A Concise History of Germany (Cambridge 1992). Neil MacGregor, Germany: Memories of a Nation (London 2014). Joachim Whaley, The German lands before 1815, in: Mary Fulbrook (ed.), German History since 1800 (London, 1997), pp. 15-37. Christopher Clarke, ‘Germany 1815-1848: Restoration or pre-March’, in: Mary Fulbrook (ed.), German History since 1800 (London, 1997), pp. 3860. Wolfgang Mommsen, ‘The Revolution 1918-1920’, in: Richard Bessel and E.J. Feuchtwanger (eds), Social Change and Political Development in Weimar Germany (London, 1981), pp. 21-54, also reprinted in Wolfgang Mommsen, Imperial Germany 1867-1918 (London, 1995). Richard Bessel, Germany 1945. From War to Peace, London 2009. Jonathan Osmond, The end of the GDR: revolution and voluntary annexation, in: Mary Fulbrook (ed.), German History since 1800 (London, 1997), pp. 454-476. Full Module Title Das Dritte Reich Module Code AREL090H5 / LNLN002H6 Credits/Level Convenor: Lecturer(s): Entrance Requirements: Day/Time: 15 credits / Level 5 and Level 6 Eckard Michels Eckard Michels Successful completion of German 3 Module Description: Dieser Kurs wird auf Deutsch unterrichtet und gibt einen Überblick über die Geschichte des Dritten Reiches unter politischen, militärischen, kulturellen und sozialen Aspekten. Wir werden dazu Text-, Audio- und visuelle Quellen analysieren. Syllabus: Term One Week 1 Die” Machtergreifung” EM 1933/34 Week 2 Die Struktur des EM “Führerstaates” Week 3 Recht und Gesetz, Polizei EM und Terror Week 4 Die “Volksgemeinschaft”: EM Gesellschaft und Sozialpolitik 1933-1939 Week5 Kultur und Kulturpolitik EM Reading Week Week 7 Aussenpolitk und EM Kriegsvorbereitung Week 8 Kriegführung und EM Besatzungspolitik Week 9 Die Verfolgung der Juden und EM die “Endlösung” Wek 10 Die deutsche Heimatfront im EM Zweiten Weltkrieg Week 11 Der deutsche Widerstand EM gegen den Nationalsozialismus Level 5 One 2500 word essay IN GERMAN from a list of essay questions. Level 6 One 3500 word essay IN GERMAN on a topic decided by the student in agreement with the course tutor. Assessment: Preparatory Reading: Term One, Tuesdays, 7.40-9.00 Hans-Ulrich Thamer, Verführung und Gewalt: Deutschland 19331945 (Berlin 1994); Norbert Frei, National Socialist Rule in Germany: The Führer State 1933-1945 (London 1993); Ian Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship (London 2000); Jane Caplan (ed.), Nazi Germany (Oxford 2008). Full Module Title Death: A Theme in German Culture Module Code ARCL014S5 / AREL046S6 Credits/Level Convenor: Lecturer(s): 30 credits; Level 5 / Level 6 Eckard Michels Nicolette David, Joanne Leal, Eckard Michels, Anna Richards, John Walker, Alexander Weber Successful completion of German 3 Entrance Requirements: Day/Time: Module Description: Syllabus: Wednesdays, 6.00-7.20 (Term 1 and 2) This course is intended to study a particular aspect of German culture throughout the centuries taking an interdisciplinary approach. The theme of death will be approached through a variety of cultural media such as literature, poetry or architecture and from a variety of thematic approaches, including literary criticism, gender studies, philosophy, theology, psychoanalysis or history. Most texts will be studied in German. Term One Week 1 Changing Attitudes towards Death in European History EM Week 2 EM Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Week 10 Week 11 The Remembrance of Fallen Soldier of the First World War in Weimar and Nazi Germany The Bombing War Against German Cities in the Second World War and its Aftermath Socialist Heroes and Ordinary Comrades: Cemeteries and Burials in the GDR Thomas Mann, Tod in Venedig Reading Week Thomas Mann, Tod in Venedig Arthur Schnitzler, Leutnant Gustl Arthur Schnitzler, Leutnant Gustl Ernst Jünger, In Stahlgewittern/The Storm of Steel Ernst Jünger, In Stahlgewittern/The Storm of Steel Term Two Week 1 Erich Maria Remarque, Im Westen nichts Neues/All Quiet on the Western Front Week 2 Erich Maria Remarque, Im EM EM ND ND ND ND JW JW JW JW Assessment: Westen nichts Neues/All Quiet on the Western Front Week 3 Peter Stramm, Agnes AR Week 4 Peter Stramm, Agnes AR Week 5 Judith Hermann, Alice JL Reading Week Week 7 Judith Hermann, Alice JL Week 8 G.E. Lessing, Wie die Alten AW den Tod gebildet Week 9 J. Grimm, Deutsche AW Mythologie Bd. 2, Kapitel 27: Der Tod Week 10 H. von Hofmannsthal, der Tor AW und der Tod Week 11 H. von Hofmannsthal, der Tor AW und der Tod Level 5: 2 essays of ca. 2500 words each from a list of essay questions, each essay weights 50% of the overall mark. Level 6: 1 essay of 2500 words (40% of the overall mark) from a list of essay questions and 1 essay of ca. 4500 words (60% of the overall mark) on a topic of choice agreed with the respective course tutor Preparatory Reading/Essential Texts: Alewyn, Richard. 'Hofmannsthals "Tor und Tod"', Monatshefte für den deutschen Unterricht 36 (1944), 409-424 [JSTOR] Antonsen, Elmer H., The Grimm Brothers and the Germanic Past (Amsterdam 1990) Philippe Aries, Western Attitudes towards Death from the Middle Ages to the Present (Baltimore 1974). Wilfried Barner (ed.), Lessing. Epoche Werk Wirkung (Munich: Beck) Elisabeth Bronfen, Over Her Dead Body: Death, Femininity and the Aesthetic (Manchester UP, 1992). Alon Confino et al (eds.), Between Mass Death and Individual Loss: The Place of the Dead in 20th-Century Germany (Oxford: 2008) Douglas J. Davies, A Brief History of Death (Oxford: Blackwell 2007). Anna Richards, The Wasting Heroine in German Fiction by Women 1770-1914 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2004). Nicholas Saul ( ed.): Philosophy and German Literature 1700-1990 (Cambridge: 2010) ( first published 2002). Shippey, Tom, ed. 2005. The Shadow-Walkers: Jacob Grimm's Mythology of the Monstrous [Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 291]. J.P.Stern, Ernst Jünger (Cambridge: Bowes and Bowes, 1952). J.P.Stern, The Dear Purchase. A Theme in German Modernism (Cambridge: CUP, 1952). Theodor Ziolkowski, Modes of Faith: Secular Surrogates for Lost Religious Belief (Chicago:2007). Erich Heller, The Disinherited Mind: Essays in Modern German Literature and Thought (London: Bowes and Bowes:1971). Full Module Title Fascism in German Film Module Code Tbc Credits/Level Convenor: Lecturer(s): Entrance Requirements: Day/Time: 15 credits / Level 5 and Level 6 Joanne Leal Joanne Leal No language requirement other than English Module Description: In this module we will explore the ways in which the Nazi era has been represented in the post-war period in films produced in the three different German states - East, West and reunified Germany. We will examine the ways in which these films reflect the memory discourses prevalent at the time of their making and how they also work to shape what is remembered and how it is remembered at particular historical moments in very different cultural and political contexts. Term One Week 1 Introduction JL Week 2 Wolfgang Staudte, Die JL Mörder sind unter uns / The Murderers are Among Us (1946) Week 3 Bernhard Wicki, Die Brücke / JL The Bridge (1959) Week 4 Frank Beyer, Nackt unter JL Wölfen / Naked Among Wolves (1963) Week5 Konrad Wolf, Ich war JL neunzehn / I was Nineteen (1968) Reading Week Week 7 Volker Schlöndorff, Die JL Blechtrommel / The Tin Drum (1979) Week 8 Marc Rothermund, Sophie JL Scholl. Die letzten Tage / Syllabus: Term One, Tuesdays 6.00-7.20 Week 9 Wek 10 Week 11 Assessment: Sophie Scholl. The Last Days (2005) Stefan Ruzowitsky, Die Fälscher / The Counterfeiters (2007) Cate Shortland, Lore (2012) Conclusion and essay writing tips JL JL JL Level 5 One 2500 word essay from a list of essay questions, due on Tuesday 17 January 2017. Level 6 One 3500 word essay on a topic decided by the student in agreement with the course tutor, due on Tuesday 17 January 2017. Essential Texts/Preparatory Reading: All films are available with English sub-titles and should be watched before class. Preparatory reading: Axel Bangert, The Nazi Past in Contemporary German Film. Viewing Experiences of Intimacy and Immersion, Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2014 Stephan Brockmann, A Critical History of German Film, Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2010 Paul Cooke and Chris Homewood (eds), New Directions in German Cinema, London-New York: I.B. Tauris, 2011 Full Module Title Literature and Society since 1945 Module Code LNLN001H5 / AREL088H6 Credits/Level Convenor/Lecturers 15 / Level 5 and Level 6 Convenor: Alexander Weber Lecturer(s): Alexander Weber, John Walker Entrance Requirements Day No language requirements Time 7.40-9.00 Module Description We will read a selection of the most popular and influential texts of West-German and Swiss literature since 1945 and examine them in the light of the post-war society from which they emerged. Editions in English will be available, but students are encouraged to read texts in the original language as far as possible. Syllabus Term Two Tuesday (Term 2 only) Week 1 Günter Grass, The Meeting at Telgte(AW) Week 2 Günter Grass, The Meeting at Teglte (AW) Week 3 Enzensberger, The Sinking of the Titanic (AW) Week 4 Enzensberger, The Sinking of the Titanic (AW) Week 5 Wolfgang Koeppen, Das Treibhaus, Suhrkamp Taschenbuch, ISBN 978-3518365786(JW) Week 6 Reading week Week 7 Wolfgang Koeppen, Das Treibhaus(JW) Week 8 Christa Wolf, Der geteilte Himmel, DTV, isbn 978 34230009157(JW) Week 9 Christa Wolf, Der geteilte Himmel(JW) Week 10 Heinrich Böll, Gruppenbild mit Dame, DTV ISBN 978 3423009591(JW) Week 11 Heinrich Böll, Gruppenbild mit Dame(JW) Assessment Table Level 5: one essay of 2500 words from a list of topics. Level 6: one independently researched essay of 3500 words with tutorial support Assignment Description Weighting Essay (level 5) 2,500 words 100% Essay (level 6) 3,500 words 100% Essential Texts Wolfgang Beutin et. al., Deutsche Literaturgeschichte Von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart (Stuttgart: Metzler 2008), pp. 427-612. Keith Bullivant, The Modern German Novel (1987: Berg Publishers) The Future of German Literature (1994: Berg Publishers) Michael Butler (ed.) The Narrative Fiction of Heinrich Böll (1995: Cambridge University Press) Full Module Title The German Novelle Module Code AREL104H5 / AREL044H6 Credits/Level Convenor/Lecturers 15 / Level 5 and Level 6 Convenor: John Walker Lecturer(s): John Walker, Alexander Walker Entrance Requirements Day Successful completion of at least German language 3. Time 6.00–7.20 pm Module Description This half-module addresses a key form in German literature which has no direct equivalent elsewhere in Europe: the Novelle. This short narrative form differs sharply from the short story, because it Tuesday (term 2 only) presupposes a tightly controlled thematic and narrative structure and usually has a central ethical message. It has aptly been described as ‘a brief compass’. The module will focus on several of the best known writers of Novellen in German such as Goethe, Eichendorff, de la Motte Fouque, Stifter, Keller or Thomas Mann. We will examine the changing significance of this form in the history of German, Austrian and Swiss literature. All the texts chosen are short but very rich in content. They can therefore easily be read in advance of the sessions and studied in depth. Students should read the texts in German, as we will study them in narrative and linguistic detail. Syllabus Term Two Week 1: Tieck: Der Runenberg (AW) Week 2: Fouqué: Das Galgenmännlein (AW) Week 3: Arnim: Isabella von Ägypten (AW) Week 4: Chamisso: Peter Schlemihl (AW) Week 5: Chamisso: Peter Schlemihl (AW) Week 6: Reading Week Week 7: Stifter: Bunte Steine (Vorrede; Turmalin) (JW) Week 8: Stifter: Bunte Steine (Vorrede; Turmalin) (JW) Week 9: Keller: Romeo und Julia auf dem Dorfe (JW) Week 10: Storm: Aquis Submersus (JW) Week 11: Thomas Mann:Tristan (JW) Assessment Table Essential Texts Level 5: one assessed essay of approximately 2,500 words from a list of topics. Level 6: one independently researched essay of approximately 3,500 words with tutorial support. All German primary texts are available in several German paperback editions (Reclam; dtv; Goldmann Taschenbuch etc.) Links to online sources such as Gutenberg.de and Zeno.org will be provided on Moodle. Secondary Reading: Roger Paulin: The Brief Compass. The Ninetenth Century German Novelle (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985) John Ellis: Narration in the German Novelle (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1974) J.P.Stern: Reinterpretations. Seven Studies in Nineteenth-Century German Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964) Full Module Title: Extended Essay Module Code: LNLN016S6 Credits/Level: Convenor: Entrance Requirements: 30/6 Anna Richards Normally intended for students in their final year. Module Description: Assessment: The Extended Essay is usually taken in the last year of your studies at Birkbeck. It consists of an independently researched essay of c. 7000 words. You need to agree a title with a potential supervisor by the end of October 2016 and register your title by that date with the module convenor Anna Richards. Once you have agreed a title you are entitled to three further supervisions with your topic supervisor. The essay has to be submitted by 1 May 2017. Assignment Essay 1 Description 7000 words Weighting 100%