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Vortrag

Walling in and Walling out: Telling Germany in Post-Wall Literature and Film

Lecture with Dr. Michael Braun

Join us for a luncheon lecture in collaboration with the German-American Heritage Museum in Washington, D.C. honoring Germany's national holiday and the 30th anniversary year of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the entire iron curtain that separated Western Europe from Soviet-controlled Eastern Europe. The speaker, Dr. Michael Braun, is the head of the Department of Literature at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in Berlin, and a professor at the University of Cologne.

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Details

Thursday, Oct. 3, 2019
Noon to 2 PM
German-American Heritage Museum
719 6th Street NW 
Washington, DC 20001



Drawing on Mann's concept of "The Great Irritability" from the novel "The Magic Mountain" ("Der Zauberberg"), published in 1924, Braun connects literature with current political issues of importance and creates a bridge from the past to the present. "The Magic Mountain" has been part of the U.S. educational canon for decades, and the late actress Liz Taylor once accused her ex-husband Richard Burton that he forced her "to read this damned book." Perhaps surprisingly, the novel indeed foreshadows the "great irritability" caused by modern populism and protectionism.
Dr. Braun theorizes that literature and film can help understand these politics of indignation, especially in 2019, 30 years after the fall of the iron curtain in Europe, by reviewing the so-called "Erinnerungskultur" or culture of remembrance. Shakespeare's would-be tryants, Michel Houllebecq's passion heroes, and Günter Grass' fallen angels are alerting us about fake news and alternative truths in the age of digital media and the resulting flood of information. They teach us how to deal with an "indifference to the truth, shamelessness and hyper-inflated self-confidence" (Stephen Greenblatt), and they tell us that when building a wall we should ask ourselves "who I was walling in and walling out" (Robert Frost).


RSVP: info@gahmusa.org


A light luncheon is included. This event is free, but RSVPs are required by emailing info@gahmusa.org. Please respond by 5 pm on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019.

Programm

Programm

Thursday, Oct. 3, 2019
Noon to 2 PM
German-American Heritage Museum
719 6th Street NW 
Washington, DC 20001

RSVP: info@gahmusa.org
 

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Veranstaltungsort

German-American Heritage Museum
719 6th Street, NW,
20001 Washington, DC
USA

Anfahrt

Referenten

  • Dr. Michael Braun
    Kontakt

    Syreta Haggray

    Syreta Haggray bild

    Programm-Managerin

    syreta.haggray@kas.de +1 202 464 5845

    Asset-Herausgeber

    Asset-Herausgeber

    Partner

    German-American Heritage Museum