Celebration of CAUTG Teaching and Research
Celebrate CAUTG Teaching and Research at the CAUTG at CONGRESS – Regina, May 25-28, 2018. All conference participants, your contribution is due: MAY 23, 2018. Please send
Celebrate CAUTG Teaching and Research at the CAUTG at CONGRESS – Regina, May 25-28, 2018. All conference participants, your contribution is due: MAY 23, 2018. Please send
The Waterloo Centre for German Studies promotes research into any and all aspects of the German-speaking world. As part of this mandate, the WCGS encourages the communication of research findings to both academics and the broader public. The Waterloo Centre for German Studies Book Prize has been established to recognize first-time authors whose scholarly work provides a substantial contribution to our understanding of any aspect of German-speaking society.
Alice A. Kuzniar, University Research Chair and Professor of German and English at the University of Waterloo, will be awarded the Hans-Walz Prize at a champagne reception on 1 December at the Robert Bosch Haus in Stuttgart for her work on the history of homeopathy.
Der Sammelband Transformationen literarischer Kommunikation. Kritik, Emotionalisierung und Medien vom 18. Jahrhundert bis heute, herausgegeben von Jörg Schuster, André Schwarz und Jan Süselbeck
Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies would like to welcome its new editors, Carrie Smith-Prei (University of Alberta) and Markus Stock (University of Toronto).
Following the CAUTG annual meeting at Ryerson University, we are producing a conference volume representing our academic and strategic discussions regarding the past, present and future of German Studies, or "Germanistik." We are requesting contributions exploring the historical and ongoing…
At this year’s CAUTG Annual Meeting, our “Meet the Authors”-event will be embedded in a larger “Celebrate Research and Teaching ” event:
This book edited by Christina Kraenzle and Maria Mayr investigates the transnational dimensions of European cultural memory and how it contributes to the construction of new non-, supra, and post-national, but also national, memory narratives. The volume