German History Society Annual Conference 2024
Date: 5-7 September 2024
Location: Manchester Metropolitan University
To register please click here
Please use the hashtag #GermanHistSoc2024 and tag us if you publicise the conference online!
The German History Society in the UK and Ireland, which publishes the journal German History, is pleased to announce that registration is open for its fifteenth annual Conference. The 2024 conference will be hosted by Manchester Metropolitan University with the local co-organisers, Dr Craig Griffiths and Dr Mercedes Peñalba-Sotorrío. Keynote speakers will include Prof. Amalie Fößel, Prof. Jennifer Evans and Prof. Ulinka Rublack.
The conference is free for members of the German History Society. There will be a modest conference fee of £25 (waged) and £8 (unwaged) for delegates who are not members of the German History Society. For details on how to join the German History Society (which also offers additional benefits, including the right to apply for our various grant schemes, and free subscription to the society’s journal, German History), please click here
Some bursaries will be available for postgraduate students; those presenting papers will receive preference for funding. Information on applying for postgraduate bursaries is available on the website.
The registration link includes the ability to book on-campus accommodation at Archway Hall, and the ability to register for the conference dinner. Archway Hall is only available to book for two nights. For those staying a single night, or if you wish to stay off campus, a list of suggested hotels can be found below:
If you are speaking at the conference, and you notice anything incorrect on the programme, please get in touch with the local co-organisers, Craig Griffiths ([email protected]) and Mercedes Peñalba-Sotorrío ([email protected]).
Programme
Thursday 5th September
GHS Committee Meeting
2.00-4.00pm Grosvenor East (GE) 3.13
Publication and Grant-writing workshop
4.00-5.00pm GE 3.09
Registration opens (tea and coffee available)
5.00pm GE 3.17 Open Space
Keynote Lecture One
6.00-7.15pm GE ground floor LT
Virilis ingenii femina: Gender, power and agency of medieval queens
Professor Amalie Fößel (Universität Duisburg-Essen)
Wine Reception
7.15pm GE 3.17 Open Space
Friday 6th September
Tea/Coffee
9.15-9.45am GE 3.17 Open Space
FRIDAY MORNING SESSION 1
9.45am-11.15am
Panel 1: Queer and Trans German Histories: A Roundtable. Part A: Late 19th Century to 1945
Chair: Craig Griffiths (Manchester Metropolitan)
GE 3.02
Bodie Ashton (ZZF Potsdam)
Benno Gammerl (EUI Florence)
Paola Medina-Gonzalez (Warwick)
Lauren Stokes (Northwestern)
Katie Sutton (Australian National University)
Panel 2: Economic and Power Political Discourses from the Late Nineteenth Century Onwards
Chair: Mark Hewitson (UCL)
GE 3.13
Mairead Barrett (University College Dublin): Power, Politics and Peace of Mind: How German Financial Integration into the Global Economy before 1914 Shaped Debates about German National Security
Robert Yee (Oxford): Banking Regulation in Germany and the German Empire, 1885-1934
Lorena De Vita (Utrecht): The Politics of Repair in the First Person Singular: Otto Küster’s Diary
Panel 3: Pre- and Post-Habsburg Austria: Military Cultures, Perceptions and Experiences
Chair: Christian Goeschel (Manchester)
GE 3.12
Niall Buckley (Trinity College Dublin): That Other Germany: The Place of Austria and the Habsburg Dynasty in the British Mind, 1911-1938
Louise Earnshaw (Leeds): ‘Heimweh war der Grundschmerz des Plennyleides’: The Basic Pain of Prisoner Suffering? Experiences of Homesickness and Repatriation among Austro-Hungarian Prisoners of War, 1914-1923
Jenna Byers (University College Dublin): A Comparison of Interwar Paramilitaries: Germany and Austria
Panel 4: Divided Germany and Beyond: Political and Emotional Perspectives
Chair: Matthew Stibbe (Sheffield Hallam)
GE. 3.09
Phil Leask (UCL): Going out of your Socialist Mind? Psychiatry and Psychotherapy in the GDR
Clare Copley (University of Central Lancashire): ‘A Judicial No Man’s Land’: Challenges to Allied Rule in 1970s West Berlin
–
Tea/Coffee
11.14-11.45am GE 3.17 Open Space
–
FRIDAY MORNING SESSION 2
11.45am-1.15pm
Panel 5: Nationalism and Cultural Exchange
Chair: Helen Roche (Durham)
GE 3.13
Sascha R. Harnisch (Erfurt): ‘Die Wacht am Rhein’: Making the Franco-German Border in German Patriotic Song during the Reichsgründungszeit
Mathis J. Gronau (Duisburg-Essen): Writing Foreign History as an Act of Cultural Exchange: The Creation and Reception of Thomas Carlyle’s Frederick the Great
Philip Decker (Princeton): The Soviet Union at the Leipzig and Königsberg Trade Fairs, 1940-1941
Panel 6: Sexuality, Race and Identity: Representations of the ‘Other’ in Interwar Germany and Austria
Chair: Robbie Aitken (Sheffield Hallam)
GE 3.02
Xiaojue Michelle Zhu (Courtauld Institute of Art): Between Respectability and Criminality: National Belonging and Photographs in the Weimar Gay Press
Abbey Rees-Hales (Birmingham): The Shadow Lesbian: Interwar Feminine Lesbian Identities in Mariette Lydis’s Lesbiennes (1926)
Michelle Kiessling (Sheffield Hallam): ‘Colour Does Not Matter’: Exoticisation and Belonging of ‘Exotic’ Youth in the Viennese Press
Panel 7: Expertise, Activism and Government in West German Society, c. 1970-1989
Chair: Christina von Hodenberg (German Historical Institute London)
GE 3.09
Rüdiger Graf (ZZF Potsdam): Behavioural Expertise and Regulation in West Germany since the 1970s
Ruth Pope (Forschungstelle für Zeitgeschichte in Hamburg): Child Sexual Abuse: Contested Knowledge in the Federal Republic of Germany in the 1980s
Moritz Föllmer (Amsterdam): Governing the Big City in West Germany in the 1970s and 1980s
–
Lunch
1.15-2.15pm GE Ground Floor – Grove Cafe
–
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 1
2.15-3.45pm
Panel 8: Approaches to Early Modern Memory
Chair: Luca Scholz (Manchester)
GE 3.09
Franziska Neumann (TU Braunschweig): Does Soil Have a Memory? Unearthing the Environmental Memory of Early Modern Braunschweig
Beat Kümin (Warwick): Building Workers as Memory Makers in the German Lands
Thomas Pert (Warwick): The ‘Refugee Experience’ in the Memory and Memoirs of the Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648)
Panel 9: The Limits of Sovereignty, 1815-1930
Chair: Tim Grady (Chester)
GE 3.13
Jean-Michel Johnston (Cambridge): The Rough Edges of German Sovereignty, 1815-1919
Jasper Heinzen (York): Empire, Custom, and Honour in the First World War
Anna Ross (Warwick): International Zones: Ludwig Noé and the Making of Free Ports after the First World War
Panel 10: Gender and the Law Across the Long 20th Century in German-Speaking Europe
Chair: Craig Griffiths (Manchester Metropolitan)
GE 3.02
Daniel Gunz (Vienna): Negotiating Military Masculinity: Queerness within the Fin de Siècle Austro-Hungarian Armed Forces
Emma Teworte (Oxford): ‘Der strafbare Eingriff”: Criminalising Abortion in Germany between the 1930s and the 1950s
Jane Freeland (Queen Mary): Women’s Rights and Reproductive Travel from Germany to the Netherlands
Panel 11: Teaching German History in the Classroom using Games: The Death of the Weimar Republic
Chair: Jeff Bowersox (UCL)
GE 3.12
Ben Green (Manchester)
Mathis Gronau (Duisburg-Essen)
Les Newsom (UCL)
–
Tea/Coffee
3.45-4.15pm GE 3.17 Open Space
–
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SESSION 2:
4.15-5.45pm
Panel 12: Late Medieval and Early Modern Boundaries, Networks and Collective Identities
Chair: Stefan Hanß (Manchester)
GE 3.13
Ben Pope (Manchester): The Formation of der adel (and its Oppression) as a Collective Identity in Upper Germany (c. 1400-1450)
Holly Fletcher (Manchester): Collective Fattening: Fatness in Pregnancy, Childbirth and Lying-in in Early Modern Germany (c. 1560-1610)
Luca Scholz (Manchester): Mapping Non-Exclusive Forms of Dominion in the Holy Roman Empire
Panel 13: Longing, Grief, and Violent Death: Painful Subjectivities in World War II and the Holocaust
Chair: Helen Roche (Durham)
GE 3.09
Thomas Brodie (Birmingham): Cultures and Politics of Mourning in Wartime Germany, 1939-1945
Lior Tibet (University College Dublin): ‘Kill Us First!’: Nazi Perpetrators and Jewish Children
Charlie Knight (Southampton): ‘Durch Fernen hin; schlaflose Nacht wird hell’: Reflections on the Archive of Marion Ferguson
Panel 14: Queer and Trans German Histories: A Roundtable. Part B: 1945 to the Present
Chair: Craig Griffiths (Manchester Metropolitan)
GE 3.02
Christopher Ewing (Purdue)
Tiffany Florvil (New Mexico)
Nikolaos Papadogiannis (Stirling)
Andrea Rottmann (FU Berlin)
Sébastien Tremblay (Flensburg)
–
Comfort break (and change of building)
5.45-6.00pm
–
FRIDAY EVENING SESSION
Keynote Lecture Two
6pm Lowry Building, 403
Co-hosted with the IHR History of Sexuality Seminar Series
Photography and Trans Visibility
Professor Jennifer Evans (University of Carleton)
Conference Dinner
7.15pm Lowry Building
Saturday 7th September
Tea/Coffee
9.00-9.30am GE 3.17 Open Space
–
SATURDAY MORNING SESSION 1
9.30-11.00am
Panel 15 Intellectual Biographies and Genealogies
Chair: Mark Hewitson (UCL)
GE 3.12
Mikko Immanen (Helsinki): Adorno’s Gamble with Klages: Harnessing Radical Conservatism for Emancipatory Ends
Claire MacLeod (Oxford): ‘The First Lady of Academic Pedagogy’: Recovering the Life and Scholarship of Elisabeth Blochmann (1892-1972)
Panel 16: Hidden in Plain Sight: Public ‘Hidden’ Histories and Hidden ‘Public’ Histories in Germany’s Twentieth Century
Chair: Christopher Dillon (King’s College London)
GE 3.02
Samantha K. Knapton (Nottingham): A Return to Normal? Queer Displacement in the Immediate Post-1945 Period
Bodie Ashton (ZZF Potsdam): ‘Zwischen Witz und Haß’ or ‘endlich glücklich’? Trans Discursive Liminality and the Challenges of the German Transgender Past
Lilú Kruspe (Erfurt): Lost in the Crowd: Sex Work, Sex Trafficking and the Lost Individual in Newspaper Coverage of ‘Mädchenhandel’
Panel 17: The GDR’s 1989 Across Borders
Chair: Christian Rau (Institut für Zeitgeschichte, Berlin)
GE 3.09
Andrew Demshuk (American University, Washington DC): German Reunification as a Success Story: ‘Project Hope’ in the ‘Filthiest Village in Europe’
Marcus Colla (Bergen): Red Flag, Green Star: The International Correspondence of East German Esperantists in 1989
Kate Stanton (Oxford), ‘Long Lost Sisters’: East German Feminism across the East-West Divide
Panel 18 The Long Quest for ‘Ordinary People’: Historical and Sociological Approaches to ‘Everyday Life’ in the 20th Century
Chair: Jane Freeland (Queen Mary)
GE 3.13
Clemens Villinger (German Historical Institute London): Alltagsgeschichte and the (Re)discovery of Normality in the 1980s
Moritz Neuffer (Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung Berlin): ‘Everyday Life’: On the History of a Concept
Ole Münch (German Historical Institute London): Are Ordinary People more Objective? Mass Observation and its Peculiar Interwar Sociology
Emily Steinhauer (Royal Holloway): Erich Fromm’s Psycho-Social Challenge to Normality
–
Comfort break (and change of building)
11.00-11.15am
Keynote Lecture Three
11.15-12.30pm Lowry Building, 403
Albrecht Dürer, Masculinity and the Politics of Renaissance Recognition
Professor Ulinka Rublack (University of Cambridge)
Lunch
12.30-1.30pm Lowry Building, 403
AGM of the German History Society
1.30-2.45pm Lowry Building, 403
Conference closes
2.45pm
Image Credit: By Foblmmu – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=116680986