UPCOMING 2022
German History Society Annual Conference 2022
This year the German History Society annual conference will be hosted at Sheffield Hallam University from the 8th – 10th September.
The window for submitting proposals for panels, round-tables, and papers has officially closed.
This years conference will feature the following keynote speakers:
Walter Sauer (University of Vienna)
Hannah Murphy (King’s College London)
Gerhild Scholz Williams (Washington University in St. Louis)
Conference Schedule 2022:
THURSDAY AFTERNOON PRE-SESSION:
GHS COMMITTEE MEETING
followed by
PUBLICATION / GRANT-WRITING WORKSHOP for postgraduates and ECRs
featuring past and present editors of German History and the GHS Book Series
THURSDAY EVENING:
Key Note Lecture 1: Walter Sauer (University of Vienna): Habsburg’s Colonial Empire and Austrian Identity
FRIDAY MORNING SESSION 1: 9.00-10.30am
Panel 1 – Early Modern Maritime Networks and Imaginaries
Chair: Karin Friedrich (Aberdeen)
‘“Jenseits Meers”: Elizabethan England and the Sea in German Print’ – Kate Shore (Oxford)
‘The Baltic Networks of the Duchy of Courland in the Seventeenth Century Atlantic: Debunking National Narratives’ – John Freeman (Cambridge)
Panel 2 – *Imperial Afterlives: Life in the Wake of the German Empire, 1918-1934
Chair: Matthew Stibbe
‘Rethinking Imperial Collapse’ – Jean-Michel Johnston (Cambridge)
‘Divorcing the dynasty: Revolution, state-building, and the fate of royal property, 1918-1930’–Jonathan Triffit (Independent Researcher)
‘Creating International Zones in the Wake of Empire’ – Anna Ross (Warwick)
Panel 3 – West German Press Culture and Scandal
Chair: Chris Dillon (KCL)
‘“When they said setting up a US court would cause difficulty, we never imagined anything like this”: The Contested Legitimacy of the United States Court for Berlin’ – Clare Copley (University of Central Lancashire)
‘From Community to Confrontation: Student Newspapers in Early West Germany’ – Rory Hanna (Sheffield)
‘Two Fathers and Train Drivers in Skirts: “Importing Identities” and Trans Moral Panics in the West German Press in the 1970s’ – Bodie Ashton (Erfurt)
FRIDAY MORNING SESSION 2: 11am-12.30pm
Panel 4 – *Metal Utopias: Imaginaries of Resources and Society in the Early Modern Era*
Chair: Dr. Allison Stielau (UCL)
‘Half-Transformed Matter: Partially Processed Quartz Carvings and Faulty Bronze in Early Modern Germany (1500-1600)’ – Agnieszka Dziki (Warsaw)
‘God, Mining, and Alchemy in the 16th Century Illustrated Works by Martin Stürtz’ – Sergei Zotov (Warwick)
‘A Most Joyous Mining Town. Urban Resource Imaginaries in the 17th Century’ – Mirjam Hähnle (GHIL)
Panel 5 – *Women in the Archive in Germany’s Century of Extremes*
Chair: Joseph Cronin (QMUL)
‘Stories with no Archive – Women Zionists in West Germany’ – Tabea Richardson
‘Building a Feminist Archive: Archiv GrauZone, Gender and Reunification’ – Jane Freeland (GHIL)
‘Exile and the Archive: Writing Women’s Intellectual History at the Extremes’ – Emily A. Steinhauer (GHIL)
Panel 6 – Colonial Imaginaries
Chair: Robbie Aitken (Sheffield Hallam)
‘The Man in his Primitive Palace: Carl Alexander Simon and the German Imagination of Southern Chile’ – Miguel Angel Gaete (York)
‘Images of German Colonies and People in Children’s Literature 1884-1918’ – Les Newsom (UCL)
‘Fritz Riebisch and the First German Colonial Traveling Exhibition (Dekowa), 1926-1931’ – Jeff Bowersox (UCL)
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 1: 1.30pm-3pm
Panel 7 – *Corporeal Boundaries and the Extended Early Modern Body*
Chair: Stefan Hanß (Manchester)
‘Coping with Crisis: The Role of Permeable Corporeality in Accounts of Seventeenth-Century Warfare’ – Regine Maritz (Berne)
‘Skin, Materials and Medicine in Northern Renaissance Art’ – Amelia Hutchinson (Cambridge)
‘The Boundaries of Body Size in Early Modern Germany’ – Holly Fletcher (Manchester)
Panel 8 – *Strikes, Work Refusal and Economic Emergency in Germany, 1916-1918*
Chair: Helen Roche (Durham)
‘Soldiers on the Labour Front: Military Strike-Breaking and Work Discipline in Wartime Berlin, 1917-18’ – André Keil (Liverpool John Moores University)
‘The Fight Against Work-Refusers in Occupied France and Belgium and in Munich/Upper Bavaria, 1916-18’ – Matthew Stibbe (Sheffield Hallam University)
‘Feeding War or Revolution? The Strikes over Contraband Food in Summer 1918’ – Andrew Donson (University of Massachusetts, Amhurst)
Panel 9 – Postwar Transnational Perspectives
Chair: Emily Steinhauer (GHIL)
‘“They will be ambassadors for peace and democracy”: Recuperative Holiday Initiatives for German Children in the Aftermath of the Second World War’ – Lorraine McEvoy (Trinity College Dublin)
‘Greek Women with Same-Sex Desires and Migration to West Germany, 1960s-1980s’ – Nikolaos Papadogiannis (St Andrews)
‘“Adiós, amigo Willy”. Transnational Ties and Personal Networks Between Germany and Spain: Democracy, Social Democracy and Internationalism in the late Cold War.’ – Marina Perez De Arcos (Oxford)
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 2: 3.30-5pm
Panel 10 – Revolutionary Strategies
Chair: Nadine Rossol (Essex)
‘“The army of Austria […], in many ways is little better than a red guard”: The Austrian Officer Corps, Between Social Democracy and Monarchism in the Wake of the Collapse of the Habsburg Empire, 1918-1927 – Eamonn Milliken (Maynooth)
‘Women’s Salons and Associations: Revolutionary Sociability in Munich during the German Revolution 1918-1919’ – Clotilde Faas (Neuchâtel)
‘Midwives and Strategies on Reforming Midwifery in Germany 1918-1945’ – Sophia Koenig (Leipzig)
Panel 11 – *Prisoner Societies, Space and Architecture in Nazi Concentration Camps*
Chair: Paul Moore (Leicester)
‘Spatial Perpetration: Dachau, the SS and the Limits of Architecture’ – Jessica Cretney (De Montfort University)
‘The Nation in the Barracks: Social Organisation among Norwegian Political Prisoners in Sachsenhausen’ – Karianne Hansen (Leicester)
‘Friendships as “Spaces” of Emotional Refuge in the Mauthausen Concentration Camp’ – Paul O’Shea (Leicester)
Panel 12 – *“Keine Frauen im Politbüro”: Women shaping official discourse in the GDR*
Chair: Jane Freeland (GHIL)
‘“An Hilde Eisler’s Magazin”. Scopes of (inter)action in the GDR Press Landscape’ – Lisa Städtler (Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel)
‘“In the hope you will understand as a woman” – East German Women and the DFD Eingaben Process’ – Anna McEwan (Glasgow)
‘“Women as Personality” – The Ethicist Helga Hörz and the UN Decade of Women’ – Lea Börgerding (Freie Universität Berlin)
Keynote Lecture 2: Hanna Murphy (King’s College London), Samuel Brun’s Schiffahrt: Artisanal Ethnography and Race-Making in Early Modern Europe
Conference Dinner (Hallam View)
SATURDAY MORNING SESSION 1
Annual General Meeting of the German History Society
SATURDAY MORNING SESSION 2: 11am-12.30pm
Panel 13 – Early Modern Male Subjectivities
Chair: David Lederer (Maynooth)
‘A Male Consort in a Time of Turmoil: Francis Stephen of Lorraine, 1736-45’ – Noé Vagner-Clévenot (Oxford)
‘Adam Bernd and the Pietist Representation of Mental Illness in Early 18th-Century Germany – Thomas Appleby (Maynooth)
Panel 14 – Round table panel: ‘Living the German Revolution 1918-19: Expectations, Experiences, Responses’
Chair: Matthew Stibbe (Sheffield Hallam)
Commentators: Moritz Föllmer (Amsterdam), Anita Klingler (Sheffield), Nadine Rossol (University of Essex)
Respondents: Chris Dillon (KCL), Benjamin Ziemann (Sheffield)
Panel 15 – Twentieth-Century Eugenics
Chair: Paul Moore (Leicester)
‘The Zurich Moment of European Eugenics’ – Constantin Kilcher (Cambridge)
‘Denied a Certificate of Fitness to Marry: The Nuremberg Race Laws as a Threat to Black German Families’ – Robbie Aitken (Sheffield Hallam)
‘”The Applicant for Naturalisation Should be Healthy and Able to Work”: “Health”, Discrimination, and the Afterlife of Eugenics in the Naturalisation Practice of West Germany – Nicholas Courtman (KCL)
Key Note Lecture 3: Gerhild Scholz Williams (Washington University in St.Louis), The Global and the Local: The World According to Erasmus Francisci (1627-1694)