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This is the list of messages related to German at the University of Michigan. You generally receive these messages on Tuesday via email, and you will see them posted on Canvas (German Advising Mail at University of Michigan). If you have any questions, please see the German Department advisors Kalli and Mary Rodena-Krasan.


Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Weiser Center for Europe and Eurasia Roundtable - Europe's Polarized Landscape: Discussion on European Elections: Monday, November 11, 5:30-7 p.m., Weiser Hall, Room 1010

University of Michigan faculty will discuss the results of elections in France, Italy, Germany, UK, and their implications.

Joshua Cole is professor of History at the University of Michigan, where he’s been teaching since 2004. His research and teaching deal primarily with the social and cultural history of France in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and he’s published work on gender and the history of the population sciences, colonial violence, and the politics of memory in France, Algeria, and Germany.

Scott Greer is professor of Health Management and Policy, Global Public Health, and Political Science at the University of Michigan. He researches the ways in which political systems operate and shape health policy decisions. He has done extensive research on a variety of topics including COVID-19 policy response, health governance, strategic purchasing in health care, the politics of public health and disaster response, federalism, science policy, and European integration. He conducts research on the European Union, United Kingdom, and the United States in particular.

Johannes von Moltke is the Rudolf Arnheim Professor of Film, TV, and Media and German Studies at the University of Michigan. His published work addresses topics in German film and cultural studies, critical theory, and film theory, and it has been supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the German Academic Exchange Service, the Berlin Program in Advanced German and European Studies, and the American Academy in Berlin, among others. A Past President of the German Studies Association, von Moltke currently serves as the Interim Director of the International Institute.

Giulia Riccò is assistant professor of Italian. Her book, New World Italians: The Invention of a Brazilian Identity, traces the discursive production of a modern, racialized Italian identity in São Paulo, Brazil. She is the co-editor of the 2020 Radical History Review issue dedicated to Fascism and Anti-Fascism since 1945. In 2021, Giulia received the Italian Scientists and Scholars of North America Foundation (ISSNAF) inaugural award for innovation in the study of Italian culture.


Website: https://events.umich.edu/event/123649

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