Professor and Chair of History, Northeastern University
Senior Fellow, Institute for European Studies, University of California, Berkeley
206 Meserve Hall, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115
[email protected]
EDUCATION
2000 Ph.D. in History, University of California, Berkeley
1995 M.A. in History, University of California, Berkeley
1990 B.A. in History, University of California, Berkeley
ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS
Spring 2020- Chair, Department of History, Northeastern University
Fall 2019- Interim Chair, Department of History, Northeastern University
2014- Professor of History, Northeastern University
2010-2014 Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University
2005-2010 Assistant Professor of History, Northeastern University
2004-05 Fulbright Fellow, Free University Berlin
2002-03 Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Pomona College
2001 Lecturer in History, University of California, Berkeley
SELECTED FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, AND AWARDS
2018-2019 Carson Center Writing Fellowship, Rachel Carson Center, Munich, Germany
2016-17 American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship
Fall 2016 Berlin Prize of the American Academy in Berlin
2009 Faculty Undergraduate Research Initiative Grant, Northeastern University
2006-07 Research and Development for Faculty Grant, Northeastern University
2004-05 Fulbright Fellowship (Free University, Berlin)
2004 Hunt Fellowship, American Council on Germany
2003 Faculty Summer Research Grant, Pomona College
2002-03 Wig Teaching Innovation Grant, Pomona College
1996-97 Fulbright Fellowship (University of Potsdam)
PUBLICATIONS
MonographsSixties Europe (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020).
West Germany and the Global Sixties: The Anti-Authoritarian Revolt, 1962-1978 (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013; 2015).
Weimar Radicals: Nazis and Communists between Authenticity and Performance (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2009; 2016).
Edited Volumes…with Andrew Lison eds., The Global Sixties in Sound and Vision: Media, Counterculture, Revolt (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
…with Lorena Anton eds., Between the Avantgarde and the Everyday: Subversive Politics in Europe, 1957 to the Present (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2011).
Book in ProgressThe Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989 (under contract with Cambridge University Press).
Articles in Refereed Journals“Going Underground. The Politics of Free Music around 1968,” commentary on an interview with Jean-Marc Rouillan, Transposition. Musique et Sciences Sociales, Special Issue on “Sound, Music and Violence” (forthcoming, January 2020).
“1968: Yesterday and Today,” special issue on the 50th anniversary of 1968, The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics and Culture, Volume 11, 2018, Issue 2, pp. 227-231.
“In Search of Space: The Trope of Escape in German Electronic Music around 1968,” special mini-theme issue on Music and Space, Contemporary European History, Volume 26, Issue 2, May 2017, pp. 339-352.
“1968 in West Germany. The anti-authoritarian Revolt,” The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics and Culture. What was Politics in 68? A Special Issue on the West German Sixties. Volume 7, Issue 2, 2014.
“Culture, Class, and Communism in Sound and Text: The Politics of Rock in the West German 1968,” special issue on the impact of the cultural turn on the left. Twentieth Century Communism, Issue 9, 2015).
“The Sixties in the City: Avant-gardes and Urban Rebels in New York, London, and West Berlin, Journal of Social History, Summer 2013 (46:4).
“The SA in the Radical Imagination of the Long Weimar Republic,” Central European History, Volume 46 Number 2 (June 2013).
“The Sixties then and Now,” European History Quarterly, Volume 43, Nr. 1 (January 2013).
“1968 East and West: Divided Germany as a Case Study in Transnational History,” American Historical Review, Volume 114 (February 2009) AHR forum on the “International 1968.”
“Music as a Weapon? Ton Steine Scherben and the Politics of Rock in Cold War Berlin,” German Studies Review 32/1 (February 2009).
“Richard Scheringer, the KPD and the Politics of Class and Nation in Germany: 1922-1969,” Contemporary European History, August 2005, Volume 14, Number 1.
“Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: Skinheads and Nazi Rock in England and Germany,” Journal of Social History, Fall 2004, Volume 38, Number 1.
Chapters in Edited Volumes“The Politics of Subculture in the Two Berlins,” in Scott Krause, Stefanie Eisenhuth, and Konrad Jarausch eds., Cold War Berlin. Confrontations, Cultures, and Identities (London: Bloomsbury, 2020).
“‘Break the Power of the Manipulators.’ Film in the West German 1968,” in Marco Abel and Christina Gerhardt eds., Celluloid Revolt. 1968 and German Cinema (Camden House, 2019).
…with Andrew Lison, “Introduction,” in Timothy Scott Brown and Andrew Lison eds., The Global Sixties in Sound and Vision: Media, Counterculture, Revolt (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
“1968 Underground: West German Radical between Subculture and Revolution,” in William Bill Osgerby et al eds., Subcultures, Popular Music and Social Change (Cambridge Scholars, 2014).
“Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: Skinheads and Nazi Rock in England and Germany” (excerpt) in Stephen Duncombe and Maxwell Tremblay eds., White Riot: Punk Rock and the Politics of Race (London and New York: Verso, 2011), 120-130.
“From England with Hate: Right Wing Rock Music in Germany through Unification and Beyond,” in Timothy S. Brown and Lorena Anton eds., Between the Avantgarde and the Everyday: Subversive Politics in Europe, 1958-2008. Series on Protest, Culture and Society (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2011).
“A Tale of two Communes: The Private and the Political in Divided Berlin, 1967-1973,” in Martin Klimke, Jacco Pekelder, and Joachim Scharloth eds., Between Prague Spring and French May 1968: Opposition and Revolt in Europe, 1960-1980 (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2011).
“United States of Amnesia? 1968 in the USA,” in Ingo Cornils ed., Memories of ’68 (Peter Lang, 2010).
“East Germany,” in Martin Klimke and Joachim Scharloth eds., 1968 in Europe. A History of Protest and Activism, 1956-1977. Transnational History Series (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).
“‘The Germans Meet the Underground’: The Politics of Pop in the Essener Songtage of 1968,” in Beate Kutschke ed., Musikkulturen in der Revolte. Studien zu Rock, Avantgarde und Klassik im Umfeld von '1968' (Köln and Weimar: Böhlau, 2008).
…with Beate Kutschke, “Politisierung, Pop und postmoderne E-Musik,” in Tobias Schaffrik and Sebastian Wienges eds., 68er-Spätlese. Was bleibt von 1968? (Villigst Profile, Schriftenreihe des Evangelischen Studienwerkes e.V. Villigst, Bd. 10) (Münster: LIT-Verlag, 2008), 83-101.
“‘Keeping it Real’ in a Different ‘Hood: (African)-Americanization and Hip Hop in Germany,” in Dipannita Basu and Sidney Lemelle eds., The Vinyl Ain’t Final: Hip Hop and the Globalization of Black Culture (London: Pluto, 2006), 137-150.
“Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: ‘Skinheads’ and ‘Nazi Rock’ in England and Germany,” in Bruce Ballenger ed., The Curious Reader: Exploring Personal and Academic Inquiry, 2/E (New York: Longman, 2006).
Book ReviewsJoachim C. Haberlen, Mark Keck-Szjabel and Kate Mahoney eds., The Politics of Authenticity: Countercultures and Radical Movements across the Iron Curtain, 1968-1989 (Berghahn Books, 2018). The English Historical Review, forthcoming, 2022.
Ben Mercer, Student Revolt in 1968. France, Italy and West Germany (Cambridge University press, 2 Historical Review, forthcoming, 2022.020). The American Historical Review, forthcoming, 2022.
Stephen Milder, Greening Democracy: The Anti-Nuclear Movement and Political Environmentalism in West Germany and Beyond, 1968-1983 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017). Central European History, forthcoming, 2021.
Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey ed., A Revolution of Perception? Consequences and Echoes of 1968 (Berghahn Books, 2014). Central European History, Volume 49, Issue 2, June 2016, pp. 298-299.
Sven Reichardt, Authentizität und Gemeinschaft. Linksalternatives Leben in den siebziger und frühen achtziger Jahren(Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2014). German History, April 2015.
Peter Dauvergne and Genevieve Lebaron, Protest Inc. The Corporatization of Activism (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2014). H-Net Review [H-Socialisms]. https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=41954. December 2014.
Kathleen Canning et al eds., Weimar Publics/Weimar Subjects: Rethinking the Political Culture of Germany in the 1920s, (Berghahn Books, 2010). Central European History (June 2013).
Martin Klimke, The ‘Other’ Alliance: Student Protest in West Germany and the United States in the Global Sixties (Princeton N.J., Princeton UP, 2010), Journal of American History (2011).
Dirk Schumann, Political Violence in the Weimar Republic, 1918-1933. Fight for the Streets and Fear of Civil War, (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2008). Central European History (March 2011).
Gerd-Rainer Horn, The Spirit of '68. Rebellion in Western Europe and North America, 1956-1976 (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2006). European History Quarterly
Edward Larkey, Rotes Rockradio. Populäre Musik und die Kommerzialisierung des DDR-Rundfunks (Münster: LIT Verlag, 2007). The Germanic Review: Literature, Culture, Theory Nr. 84 (2009), volumes 3-4.
“The Nervous City,” review of Andreas Killen, Berlin Electropolis. Shock, Nerves, and German Modernity (Berkeley, University of California Press. Weimar and Now: German Cultural Criticism: 2006), H-Urban, Spring 2006.
Other Publications“The 1960s from Real to Reel: Cultural R/Evolution and Moving Image in Film and Television.” Cinephile. Vol. 11. No. 1. Summer 2015. “Visions of the Sixties.”
“Culture and Revolution. Underground Publishing in West Germany around 1968.” Berlin Journal, Nr. 30, Fall 2016.
“1968,” ZZF Dokupedia, Center for Contemporary History Potsdam. http://docupedia.de/zg/1968
INVITED TALKS“The Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989,” 2019 DAAD Dozententreffen (Annual Meeting of DAAD German Studies Professors in North America), Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Portland, Oregon, October 3-6, 2019.
“Mapping Green Social Movements in Divided Germany,” Lunchtime Colloquium, Rachel Carson Center, April 26, 2019.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany,” Presentation for History PhD students in ProMoHist, the doctoral program for Modern History at the Ludwig Maximillian University, Munich, April 26, 2019.
“1968 in Divided Germany: Its Meaning and Legacy,” Bowdoin College, October 30, 2018.
Fascism Then and Now: Some Theoretical and Practical Reflections,” Institute for European Studies, University of California, Berkeley, October 10, 2018.
“What's Left? The Political Meaning of 1968,” at the conference “The Legacy of 1968,” Harvard University, October 5, 2018.
"1968 at Fifty Years: Why it still Matters,” Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures,
University of New Hampshire, October 3, 2018.
“What’s so Global about the Global 1968?,” at the conference “1968—The Global and the Local,” Georgetown University, March 23, 2018.
“1968 East and West,” California State University Long Beach, March 6, 2018.
“The ‘Global 1968,’ Fifty Years Later,” Institute for European Studies, University of California, Berkeley, February 28, 2018.
“The French May at Fifty: Why the Global 1968 Still Matters,” Roundtable,
Northeastern University, March 14, 2018.
“Is Revolution Still Possible? The Crisis of Capitalism and the Meaning of 1968,” University of Nebraska, September 28, 2017.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany,” 93rd Minisymposium/12th Rachel Carson Center Lecture, Institute of Social Ecology, Vienna, Austria, March 21, 2019.
“Notes Toward a History of Environmental Social Movements in Three Germanies,”
Berlin-Brandenburg Colloquium for Environmental History, Humboldt University, December 8, 2016.
“Green in Between: Environmental Politics and the Reunification of Germany from
Below,” Forschungskolloquium zur Vergleichs-und Verflechtungsgeschichte, Free University Berlin, November 7, 2016.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989,” Lehrstuhls für Zeitgeschichte und des Lehrstuhls für Neuere und Neueste Geschichte der Universität Mannheim in Kooperation mit dem Heidelberg Center for American Studies, October 26, 2016.
“The Color Green: Emotions and Gender after 1968,” Center for the History of Emotions Colloquium, Max Planck Institute, Berlin, October 25, 2016.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989,” American Academy in Berlin, October 18, 2016.
“Revisiting 1968 and the Global Sixties. Definitions and Meanings,” Roundtable at the conference “Revisiting 1968 and the Global Sixties,” NYU Shanghai, March 13-15, 2016.
“‘An Uprising in the Zone of the Spirit': Reflections on Religion and Social Movements around 1968,” Faculty Works in Progress Series, College of Social Sciences and the Humanities, Northeastern University, October 19, 2015.
“West Germany and the Global Sixties,” University of Leeds, Leeds, UK, February 23, 2015.
"What was '1968'? The West German Case in Global Perspective", Center for German and European Studies, University of California, Berkeley, February 5, 2015.
Roundtable on the 25th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall, in connection with the exhibit “Virtuelle Mauer: Reconstructing the Berlin Wall,” November 13, 2014, Northeastern University.
Introduction to the musical “Hair!,” Office of Alumni Relations performing arts series ArtsAlive!, April 1, 2011.
“1968: West Germany in the World,” at the conference “1968 in Japan, Deutschland und den USA: Politischer Protest und kultureller Wandel,” Japanisch-Deutsches Zentrum Berlin [JDZB], March 2009.
“The Politics of Regret: 1968 and the Emotions,” presented at the symposium "What
Remains? 1968 Protest Movements and Cultural Memory," University of Mississippi, October 2008.
“Protest Repertoires and Protest Cultures: National Specificities and Transnational Convergences in Eastern and Western Europe during the Cold War,” at the conference Confronting Cold War Conformity: Peace and Protest Cultures in Europe, 1945-1989. Summer School at the Charles University Prague with the support of the European Commission, August 2008.
“Between Revolution and Recuperation: Popular Music and 1968,” presented at the symposium "The Aesthetics of Engagement: 1968/2008," Institute for Historical Studies at, Northwestern University, June 6, 2008.
“The Sixties in Cold War Berlin: A Brief History in Photographs,” Phi Alpha Theta Honors Society Induction Ceremony, History Department, Northeastern University, May 3, 2007.
“Oliver Hirschbiegel’s Der Untergang: A Brief Introduction,” Northeastern University International Affairs Society Film Series, March 28, 2006.
“The American Liberal Arts College: An Introduction for German Exchange Teachers,” Fulbright Kommission, Berlin, June 2005.
“A Tale of Two Hills: Prenzlauer Berg and Kreuzberg as ‘alternative’ Stadtteile in Cold War Berlin,” Free University, Berlin, June 2005.
“Berlin on the Margins: Underground Culture and the Political-Aesthetics of Ruin,” presented at the “Fallen Cities and the Lure of Ruin” conference, Gould Center for Humanistic Studies, Claremont McKenna College, February 2004.
“What’s so Global about it? Writing the History of 1968 in West Germany,” Department of History, Arizona State University, February 2004.
CONFERENCE PAPERS
“Faith in Revolt: The Journal Radical Religion, 1973-1981,” Fifth International Conference on Religion and Spirituality in Society, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, April 16, 2015.
“In Search of Space: The Trope of Escape in German Electronic Music around 1968,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Denver, Colorado, October 2013.
“1968 Underground: West German Radical between Subculture and Revolution,” Subcultures, Popular Music and Social Change—A Cross-Disciplinary Symposium, London Metropolitan University, 15 September 2011.
“Subculture, Autonomy and Revolution. Neo-anarchism in West Berlin circa 1970,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 2008.
“Memory and Forgetting: 1968 in the United States,” presented at the conference “Memories of '68: International Perspectives,” University of Leeds, UK, 17-18 April 2008.
“Alternative Publishing and Gegenöffentlichkeit in West Germany 1968-1977,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, San Diego, October 2007.
“Popular Music/Popular Politics: Some Thoughts on the Role of Rock in the West German ‘1968,’” presented at the forum “Designing a New Life: Aesthetics and Lifestyles of Political and Social Protest,” University of Zurich, March 2007.
“A Tale of Two Revolts: ‘1968’ in Divided Germany,” presented at the 3rd Conference of the Interdisciplinary Studies Research Forum Protest Movements (IFK): “Between the ‘Prague Spring’ and the ‘French May’: Transnational Exchange and National Recontextualization of Protest Cultures in 1960/70s Europe,” August 25-27, 2006 Heidelberg Center for American Studies, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
“‘Beefsteak Nazis’ and ‘Brown Bolshevists’: Boundaries and Identity in the Rise of National Socialism,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, January 2002.
“‘Not Hitler, nor Stennes, Scheringer shows you the way’: Working-class Stormtroopers and the KPD,” presented at the 2000 Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association in Houston.
CONFERENCE PANELS
Presenter in the workshop "Entanglements and Separations": German Histories since 1945.” Meeting of the German Studies Association, Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021, Indianapolis, Indiana, 2021.
Moderator for the panel “From Grassroots Action and Particle Radiation to Interminable Half-lives and Planetary Crises: Micro- and Macro-Scales in Modern Environmentalism (sponsored by the Environmental Studies Network),” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021, Indianapolis, Indiana, 2021.
Commentator for the panel “East and West Germans’ Transnational Trajectories and Alternative Solidarities.” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Portland, Oregon, October 3-6, 2019.
Commentator for the panel “Between Politics and Society: Environmental policy responses after Chernobyl: Eastern and Western Europe: Part 3,” at the conference “Chernobyl – Turning Point or Catalyst? Changing Practices, Structures and Perceptions in Environmental Policy and Politics (1970s-1990s),” Heinrich Böll Stiftung, Berlin, December 2-3, 2016.
Chair and Commentator for the panel “Eastern Europe and Soviet Union,” at the conference “Revisiting 1968 and the Global Sixties,” NYU Abu Dhabi, September 20, 2016.
Presenter in the workshop “New Narratives for the History of the Federal Republic.” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, San Diego, California, September 29 - October 2, 2016.
Chair and Commentator for the panel “Consciousness, Culture, and Contested Space(s),” Northeastern University 8th Annual Graduate Conference in World History, “Transforming the Transnational: Making and Breaking Boundaries in World History,” March 28, 2016.
Presenter in the workshop “What was Politics in 1968.” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Denver, Colorado, October 2013.
Commentator for the panel “Imagining Black Power in the Global Sixties from Berlin to Beijing” at the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Boston, January 2011.
Moderator for the panel “Nodes of Culture: Individuals and Artifacts as Imagined Centers” at the conference "Networks and Connections," Northeastern University, March 2010.
Moderator for the panel “The Enduring Past and the Critique of the Present in West German Visual Politics circa 1960,” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 2008.
Moderator for the Panel “Youth Subcultures,” at the conference Confronting Cold War Conformity: Peace and Protest Cultures in Europe, 1945-1989. Summer School at the Charles University Prague with the support of the European Commission, August 2008.
Panel discussant for the talk by Daniel Cohn-Bendit, “‘Forget ‘68—it was wonderful, but it's over!’ Revisiting the 1960s in Germany, Europe, and the US,” Brandeis University, March 18, 2008.
Moderator for the panel “1968 in Eastern and Western Europe I,” at the conference “Tracing Protest Movements: Perspectives from Sociology, Political Science, and Media Studies,” Martin-Luther-Universität Halle, Germany, November 2006.
Commentator for the panel “Reading and Interpreting World War II Diaries from Europe and Asia: An Interdisciplinary Workshop,” Pacific Basin Institute, Pomona College, November 2002.
Moderator for the panel “New Perspectives on the Radical Right in the Weimar Republic” at the 2002 Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association in San Diego.
IN THE MEDIA
“Remembering D-Day 75 Years Later,” News at Northeastern video, June 6, 2019.
“Making Sense of ‘1968,’” “Against the Grain,” KPFA Pacifica Radio 94.1 FM.
“Extraordinary events, ordinary people,” Northeastern magazine, February 17, 2011.
“Anti-War Billboards Sprouting On Nation's Highways,” Wayne Woolley, The Star Ledger, Monday March 03, 2008.
“Fred Perry,” Julie Haire, Swindle Magazine. The London Issue, Spring 2008.
“White Supremacists by the Numbers,” Brian Palmer, Slate.com, Oct. 29, 2008.
TEACHING
Undergraduate Courses at Northeastern University
Hitler, Germany, and the Holocaust; 1968 in Global Perspective (Capstone); Comparative Fascism (Capstone); Revolution in Theory and Practice; Transnational Popular Culture; World History since 1945; History 1200; History 1000 (Introduction to the Major).
Graduate Courses at Northeastern University
Historical Theory and Methodology; 1968 in Global Perspective; Comparative Fascism; Revolution in Theory and Practice.
Undergraduate Courses at Pomona College
Comparative Fascism; Popular Culture and Daily Life in Cold War Europe; Revolution in Theory and Practice; Western Civilization since 1789.
Undergraduate Course at the University of California, Berkeley1968 (History 103, Junior Proseminar)
SERVICE TO THE UNIVERSITY & ACADEMIC COMMUNITY
Service to the Profession
Environmental Studies Network of the German Studies Association, Co-Coordinator, 2018-2020; Chair 2020-2021.
American Academy in Berlin, External Reviewer for the Berlin Prize 2017-18; 2018-19.
Fritz Stern Dissertation Prize, Chair 2015-16; Committee Member, 2014-15
Council for European Studies Pre-Dissertation Fellowship, Committee Member, 2012-13.
Manuscript reviewer for Berghahn Books, Bloomsbury, Cambridge University Press, Central European History, Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies, Contemporary European History, Cultural Dynamics, European Review of History, German Studies Review, International Review of Social History, Journal of Left History, Journal of Modern History, McGraw Hill Publishing, Nebraska University Press, Oxford University Press, Princeton University Press, Routledge.
Service to the University/College/Department
Chair of History, Northeastern University, Spring 2020-present.
Interim Chair of History, Northeastern University, Fall 2019; Chair of History, Spring 2020-
CSSH Research Development Initiative Committee, Northeastern University, Committee Member, Spring 2015.
Director of Graduate Studies, Department of History, Northeastern University, 2014-2015.
Chair, Full Professor Promotion Committee, Department of History, Northeastern University, 2014.
Ad Hoc Graduate Curriculum Committee, College of Social Sciences and Humanities 2013-14.
Ad Hoc Working Group on Scholarly Journals and Presses, Department of History Fall 2013.
Member, ad hoc Graduate Curriculum Committee in CSSH 2013.
Interim Director of Graduate Studies Fall 2013.
Member, Chair’s Advisory Committee 2011-12.
Member, Latin American Search Committee 2011-12.
Director of Graduate Studies 2010-2012.
Member, Graduate Committee 2008-2011.
Member, World History Search Committee 2006-7.
Member, African History Search Committee 2006-7.
Member, Undergraduate Committee 2006-9.
Faculty Advisor, Phi Alpha Theta Honors Society 2006-9.
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS AND AFFILIATIONS
American Historical Association
German Studies Association
Senior Fellow, Institute for European Studies, University of California, Berkeley
206 Meserve Hall, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115
[email protected]
EDUCATION
2000 Ph.D. in History, University of California, Berkeley
1995 M.A. in History, University of California, Berkeley
1990 B.A. in History, University of California, Berkeley
ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS
Spring 2020- Chair, Department of History, Northeastern University
Fall 2019- Interim Chair, Department of History, Northeastern University
2014- Professor of History, Northeastern University
2010-2014 Associate Professor of History, Northeastern University
2005-2010 Assistant Professor of History, Northeastern University
2004-05 Fulbright Fellow, Free University Berlin
2002-03 Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Pomona College
2001 Lecturer in History, University of California, Berkeley
SELECTED FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, AND AWARDS
2018-2019 Carson Center Writing Fellowship, Rachel Carson Center, Munich, Germany
2016-17 American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship
Fall 2016 Berlin Prize of the American Academy in Berlin
2009 Faculty Undergraduate Research Initiative Grant, Northeastern University
2006-07 Research and Development for Faculty Grant, Northeastern University
2004-05 Fulbright Fellowship (Free University, Berlin)
2004 Hunt Fellowship, American Council on Germany
2003 Faculty Summer Research Grant, Pomona College
2002-03 Wig Teaching Innovation Grant, Pomona College
1996-97 Fulbright Fellowship (University of Potsdam)
PUBLICATIONS
MonographsSixties Europe (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020).
West Germany and the Global Sixties: The Anti-Authoritarian Revolt, 1962-1978 (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013; 2015).
Weimar Radicals: Nazis and Communists between Authenticity and Performance (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2009; 2016).
Edited Volumes…with Andrew Lison eds., The Global Sixties in Sound and Vision: Media, Counterculture, Revolt (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
…with Lorena Anton eds., Between the Avantgarde and the Everyday: Subversive Politics in Europe, 1957 to the Present (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2011).
Book in ProgressThe Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989 (under contract with Cambridge University Press).
Articles in Refereed Journals“Going Underground. The Politics of Free Music around 1968,” commentary on an interview with Jean-Marc Rouillan, Transposition. Musique et Sciences Sociales, Special Issue on “Sound, Music and Violence” (forthcoming, January 2020).
“1968: Yesterday and Today,” special issue on the 50th anniversary of 1968, The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics and Culture, Volume 11, 2018, Issue 2, pp. 227-231.
“In Search of Space: The Trope of Escape in German Electronic Music around 1968,” special mini-theme issue on Music and Space, Contemporary European History, Volume 26, Issue 2, May 2017, pp. 339-352.
“1968 in West Germany. The anti-authoritarian Revolt,” The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics and Culture. What was Politics in 68? A Special Issue on the West German Sixties. Volume 7, Issue 2, 2014.
“Culture, Class, and Communism in Sound and Text: The Politics of Rock in the West German 1968,” special issue on the impact of the cultural turn on the left. Twentieth Century Communism, Issue 9, 2015).
“The Sixties in the City: Avant-gardes and Urban Rebels in New York, London, and West Berlin, Journal of Social History, Summer 2013 (46:4).
“The SA in the Radical Imagination of the Long Weimar Republic,” Central European History, Volume 46 Number 2 (June 2013).
“The Sixties then and Now,” European History Quarterly, Volume 43, Nr. 1 (January 2013).
“1968 East and West: Divided Germany as a Case Study in Transnational History,” American Historical Review, Volume 114 (February 2009) AHR forum on the “International 1968.”
“Music as a Weapon? Ton Steine Scherben and the Politics of Rock in Cold War Berlin,” German Studies Review 32/1 (February 2009).
“Richard Scheringer, the KPD and the Politics of Class and Nation in Germany: 1922-1969,” Contemporary European History, August 2005, Volume 14, Number 1.
“Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: Skinheads and Nazi Rock in England and Germany,” Journal of Social History, Fall 2004, Volume 38, Number 1.
Chapters in Edited Volumes“The Politics of Subculture in the Two Berlins,” in Scott Krause, Stefanie Eisenhuth, and Konrad Jarausch eds., Cold War Berlin. Confrontations, Cultures, and Identities (London: Bloomsbury, 2020).
“‘Break the Power of the Manipulators.’ Film in the West German 1968,” in Marco Abel and Christina Gerhardt eds., Celluloid Revolt. 1968 and German Cinema (Camden House, 2019).
…with Andrew Lison, “Introduction,” in Timothy Scott Brown and Andrew Lison eds., The Global Sixties in Sound and Vision: Media, Counterculture, Revolt (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
“1968 Underground: West German Radical between Subculture and Revolution,” in William Bill Osgerby et al eds., Subcultures, Popular Music and Social Change (Cambridge Scholars, 2014).
“Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: Skinheads and Nazi Rock in England and Germany” (excerpt) in Stephen Duncombe and Maxwell Tremblay eds., White Riot: Punk Rock and the Politics of Race (London and New York: Verso, 2011), 120-130.
“From England with Hate: Right Wing Rock Music in Germany through Unification and Beyond,” in Timothy S. Brown and Lorena Anton eds., Between the Avantgarde and the Everyday: Subversive Politics in Europe, 1958-2008. Series on Protest, Culture and Society (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2011).
“A Tale of two Communes: The Private and the Political in Divided Berlin, 1967-1973,” in Martin Klimke, Jacco Pekelder, and Joachim Scharloth eds., Between Prague Spring and French May 1968: Opposition and Revolt in Europe, 1960-1980 (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2011).
“United States of Amnesia? 1968 in the USA,” in Ingo Cornils ed., Memories of ’68 (Peter Lang, 2010).
“East Germany,” in Martin Klimke and Joachim Scharloth eds., 1968 in Europe. A History of Protest and Activism, 1956-1977. Transnational History Series (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).
“‘The Germans Meet the Underground’: The Politics of Pop in the Essener Songtage of 1968,” in Beate Kutschke ed., Musikkulturen in der Revolte. Studien zu Rock, Avantgarde und Klassik im Umfeld von '1968' (Köln and Weimar: Böhlau, 2008).
…with Beate Kutschke, “Politisierung, Pop und postmoderne E-Musik,” in Tobias Schaffrik and Sebastian Wienges eds., 68er-Spätlese. Was bleibt von 1968? (Villigst Profile, Schriftenreihe des Evangelischen Studienwerkes e.V. Villigst, Bd. 10) (Münster: LIT-Verlag, 2008), 83-101.
“‘Keeping it Real’ in a Different ‘Hood: (African)-Americanization and Hip Hop in Germany,” in Dipannita Basu and Sidney Lemelle eds., The Vinyl Ain’t Final: Hip Hop and the Globalization of Black Culture (London: Pluto, 2006), 137-150.
“Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: ‘Skinheads’ and ‘Nazi Rock’ in England and Germany,” in Bruce Ballenger ed., The Curious Reader: Exploring Personal and Academic Inquiry, 2/E (New York: Longman, 2006).
Book ReviewsJoachim C. Haberlen, Mark Keck-Szjabel and Kate Mahoney eds., The Politics of Authenticity: Countercultures and Radical Movements across the Iron Curtain, 1968-1989 (Berghahn Books, 2018). The English Historical Review, forthcoming, 2022.
Ben Mercer, Student Revolt in 1968. France, Italy and West Germany (Cambridge University press, 2 Historical Review, forthcoming, 2022.020). The American Historical Review, forthcoming, 2022.
Stephen Milder, Greening Democracy: The Anti-Nuclear Movement and Political Environmentalism in West Germany and Beyond, 1968-1983 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017). Central European History, forthcoming, 2021.
Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey ed., A Revolution of Perception? Consequences and Echoes of 1968 (Berghahn Books, 2014). Central European History, Volume 49, Issue 2, June 2016, pp. 298-299.
Sven Reichardt, Authentizität und Gemeinschaft. Linksalternatives Leben in den siebziger und frühen achtziger Jahren(Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2014). German History, April 2015.
Peter Dauvergne and Genevieve Lebaron, Protest Inc. The Corporatization of Activism (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2014). H-Net Review [H-Socialisms]. https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=41954. December 2014.
Kathleen Canning et al eds., Weimar Publics/Weimar Subjects: Rethinking the Political Culture of Germany in the 1920s, (Berghahn Books, 2010). Central European History (June 2013).
Martin Klimke, The ‘Other’ Alliance: Student Protest in West Germany and the United States in the Global Sixties (Princeton N.J., Princeton UP, 2010), Journal of American History (2011).
Dirk Schumann, Political Violence in the Weimar Republic, 1918-1933. Fight for the Streets and Fear of Civil War, (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2008). Central European History (March 2011).
Gerd-Rainer Horn, The Spirit of '68. Rebellion in Western Europe and North America, 1956-1976 (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2006). European History Quarterly
Edward Larkey, Rotes Rockradio. Populäre Musik und die Kommerzialisierung des DDR-Rundfunks (Münster: LIT Verlag, 2007). The Germanic Review: Literature, Culture, Theory Nr. 84 (2009), volumes 3-4.
“The Nervous City,” review of Andreas Killen, Berlin Electropolis. Shock, Nerves, and German Modernity (Berkeley, University of California Press. Weimar and Now: German Cultural Criticism: 2006), H-Urban, Spring 2006.
Other Publications“The 1960s from Real to Reel: Cultural R/Evolution and Moving Image in Film and Television.” Cinephile. Vol. 11. No. 1. Summer 2015. “Visions of the Sixties.”
“Culture and Revolution. Underground Publishing in West Germany around 1968.” Berlin Journal, Nr. 30, Fall 2016.
“1968,” ZZF Dokupedia, Center for Contemporary History Potsdam. http://docupedia.de/zg/1968
INVITED TALKS“The Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989,” 2019 DAAD Dozententreffen (Annual Meeting of DAAD German Studies Professors in North America), Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Portland, Oregon, October 3-6, 2019.
“Mapping Green Social Movements in Divided Germany,” Lunchtime Colloquium, Rachel Carson Center, April 26, 2019.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany,” Presentation for History PhD students in ProMoHist, the doctoral program for Modern History at the Ludwig Maximillian University, Munich, April 26, 2019.
“1968 in Divided Germany: Its Meaning and Legacy,” Bowdoin College, October 30, 2018.
Fascism Then and Now: Some Theoretical and Practical Reflections,” Institute for European Studies, University of California, Berkeley, October 10, 2018.
“What's Left? The Political Meaning of 1968,” at the conference “The Legacy of 1968,” Harvard University, October 5, 2018.
"1968 at Fifty Years: Why it still Matters,” Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures,
University of New Hampshire, October 3, 2018.
“What’s so Global about the Global 1968?,” at the conference “1968—The Global and the Local,” Georgetown University, March 23, 2018.
“1968 East and West,” California State University Long Beach, March 6, 2018.
“The ‘Global 1968,’ Fifty Years Later,” Institute for European Studies, University of California, Berkeley, February 28, 2018.
“The French May at Fifty: Why the Global 1968 Still Matters,” Roundtable,
Northeastern University, March 14, 2018.
“Is Revolution Still Possible? The Crisis of Capitalism and the Meaning of 1968,” University of Nebraska, September 28, 2017.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany,” 93rd Minisymposium/12th Rachel Carson Center Lecture, Institute of Social Ecology, Vienna, Austria, March 21, 2019.
“Notes Toward a History of Environmental Social Movements in Three Germanies,”
Berlin-Brandenburg Colloquium for Environmental History, Humboldt University, December 8, 2016.
“Green in Between: Environmental Politics and the Reunification of Germany from
Below,” Forschungskolloquium zur Vergleichs-und Verflechtungsgeschichte, Free University Berlin, November 7, 2016.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989,” Lehrstuhls für Zeitgeschichte und des Lehrstuhls für Neuere und Neueste Geschichte der Universität Mannheim in Kooperation mit dem Heidelberg Center for American Studies, October 26, 2016.
“The Color Green: Emotions and Gender after 1968,” Center for the History of Emotions Colloquium, Max Planck Institute, Berlin, October 25, 2016.
“The Greening of Cold War Germany: Environmentalism and Social Movements across the Wall and Beyond, 1968-1989,” American Academy in Berlin, October 18, 2016.
“Revisiting 1968 and the Global Sixties. Definitions and Meanings,” Roundtable at the conference “Revisiting 1968 and the Global Sixties,” NYU Shanghai, March 13-15, 2016.
“‘An Uprising in the Zone of the Spirit': Reflections on Religion and Social Movements around 1968,” Faculty Works in Progress Series, College of Social Sciences and the Humanities, Northeastern University, October 19, 2015.
“West Germany and the Global Sixties,” University of Leeds, Leeds, UK, February 23, 2015.
"What was '1968'? The West German Case in Global Perspective", Center for German and European Studies, University of California, Berkeley, February 5, 2015.
Roundtable on the 25th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall, in connection with the exhibit “Virtuelle Mauer: Reconstructing the Berlin Wall,” November 13, 2014, Northeastern University.
Introduction to the musical “Hair!,” Office of Alumni Relations performing arts series ArtsAlive!, April 1, 2011.
“1968: West Germany in the World,” at the conference “1968 in Japan, Deutschland und den USA: Politischer Protest und kultureller Wandel,” Japanisch-Deutsches Zentrum Berlin [JDZB], March 2009.
“The Politics of Regret: 1968 and the Emotions,” presented at the symposium "What
Remains? 1968 Protest Movements and Cultural Memory," University of Mississippi, October 2008.
“Protest Repertoires and Protest Cultures: National Specificities and Transnational Convergences in Eastern and Western Europe during the Cold War,” at the conference Confronting Cold War Conformity: Peace and Protest Cultures in Europe, 1945-1989. Summer School at the Charles University Prague with the support of the European Commission, August 2008.
“Between Revolution and Recuperation: Popular Music and 1968,” presented at the symposium "The Aesthetics of Engagement: 1968/2008," Institute for Historical Studies at, Northwestern University, June 6, 2008.
“The Sixties in Cold War Berlin: A Brief History in Photographs,” Phi Alpha Theta Honors Society Induction Ceremony, History Department, Northeastern University, May 3, 2007.
“Oliver Hirschbiegel’s Der Untergang: A Brief Introduction,” Northeastern University International Affairs Society Film Series, March 28, 2006.
“The American Liberal Arts College: An Introduction for German Exchange Teachers,” Fulbright Kommission, Berlin, June 2005.
“A Tale of Two Hills: Prenzlauer Berg and Kreuzberg as ‘alternative’ Stadtteile in Cold War Berlin,” Free University, Berlin, June 2005.
“Berlin on the Margins: Underground Culture and the Political-Aesthetics of Ruin,” presented at the “Fallen Cities and the Lure of Ruin” conference, Gould Center for Humanistic Studies, Claremont McKenna College, February 2004.
“What’s so Global about it? Writing the History of 1968 in West Germany,” Department of History, Arizona State University, February 2004.
CONFERENCE PAPERS
“Faith in Revolt: The Journal Radical Religion, 1973-1981,” Fifth International Conference on Religion and Spirituality in Society, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, April 16, 2015.
“In Search of Space: The Trope of Escape in German Electronic Music around 1968,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Denver, Colorado, October 2013.
“1968 Underground: West German Radical between Subculture and Revolution,” Subcultures, Popular Music and Social Change—A Cross-Disciplinary Symposium, London Metropolitan University, 15 September 2011.
“Subculture, Autonomy and Revolution. Neo-anarchism in West Berlin circa 1970,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 2008.
“Memory and Forgetting: 1968 in the United States,” presented at the conference “Memories of '68: International Perspectives,” University of Leeds, UK, 17-18 April 2008.
“Alternative Publishing and Gegenöffentlichkeit in West Germany 1968-1977,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, San Diego, October 2007.
“Popular Music/Popular Politics: Some Thoughts on the Role of Rock in the West German ‘1968,’” presented at the forum “Designing a New Life: Aesthetics and Lifestyles of Political and Social Protest,” University of Zurich, March 2007.
“A Tale of Two Revolts: ‘1968’ in Divided Germany,” presented at the 3rd Conference of the Interdisciplinary Studies Research Forum Protest Movements (IFK): “Between the ‘Prague Spring’ and the ‘French May’: Transnational Exchange and National Recontextualization of Protest Cultures in 1960/70s Europe,” August 25-27, 2006 Heidelberg Center for American Studies, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
“‘Beefsteak Nazis’ and ‘Brown Bolshevists’: Boundaries and Identity in the Rise of National Socialism,” presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, January 2002.
“‘Not Hitler, nor Stennes, Scheringer shows you the way’: Working-class Stormtroopers and the KPD,” presented at the 2000 Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association in Houston.
CONFERENCE PANELS
Presenter in the workshop "Entanglements and Separations": German Histories since 1945.” Meeting of the German Studies Association, Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021, Indianapolis, Indiana, 2021.
Moderator for the panel “From Grassroots Action and Particle Radiation to Interminable Half-lives and Planetary Crises: Micro- and Macro-Scales in Modern Environmentalism (sponsored by the Environmental Studies Network),” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Sept. 30-Oct. 3, 2021, Indianapolis, Indiana, 2021.
Commentator for the panel “East and West Germans’ Transnational Trajectories and Alternative Solidarities.” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Portland, Oregon, October 3-6, 2019.
Commentator for the panel “Between Politics and Society: Environmental policy responses after Chernobyl: Eastern and Western Europe: Part 3,” at the conference “Chernobyl – Turning Point or Catalyst? Changing Practices, Structures and Perceptions in Environmental Policy and Politics (1970s-1990s),” Heinrich Böll Stiftung, Berlin, December 2-3, 2016.
Chair and Commentator for the panel “Eastern Europe and Soviet Union,” at the conference “Revisiting 1968 and the Global Sixties,” NYU Abu Dhabi, September 20, 2016.
Presenter in the workshop “New Narratives for the History of the Federal Republic.” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, San Diego, California, September 29 - October 2, 2016.
Chair and Commentator for the panel “Consciousness, Culture, and Contested Space(s),” Northeastern University 8th Annual Graduate Conference in World History, “Transforming the Transnational: Making and Breaking Boundaries in World History,” March 28, 2016.
Presenter in the workshop “What was Politics in 1968.” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Denver, Colorado, October 2013.
Commentator for the panel “Imagining Black Power in the Global Sixties from Berlin to Beijing” at the Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association, Boston, January 2011.
Moderator for the panel “Nodes of Culture: Individuals and Artifacts as Imagined Centers” at the conference "Networks and Connections," Northeastern University, March 2010.
Moderator for the panel “The Enduring Past and the Critique of the Present in West German Visual Politics circa 1960,” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, St. Paul, Minnesota, October 2008.
Moderator for the Panel “Youth Subcultures,” at the conference Confronting Cold War Conformity: Peace and Protest Cultures in Europe, 1945-1989. Summer School at the Charles University Prague with the support of the European Commission, August 2008.
Panel discussant for the talk by Daniel Cohn-Bendit, “‘Forget ‘68—it was wonderful, but it's over!’ Revisiting the 1960s in Germany, Europe, and the US,” Brandeis University, March 18, 2008.
Moderator for the panel “1968 in Eastern and Western Europe I,” at the conference “Tracing Protest Movements: Perspectives from Sociology, Political Science, and Media Studies,” Martin-Luther-Universität Halle, Germany, November 2006.
Commentator for the panel “Reading and Interpreting World War II Diaries from Europe and Asia: An Interdisciplinary Workshop,” Pacific Basin Institute, Pomona College, November 2002.
Moderator for the panel “New Perspectives on the Radical Right in the Weimar Republic” at the 2002 Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association in San Diego.
IN THE MEDIA
“Remembering D-Day 75 Years Later,” News at Northeastern video, June 6, 2019.
“Making Sense of ‘1968,’” “Against the Grain,” KPFA Pacifica Radio 94.1 FM.
“Extraordinary events, ordinary people,” Northeastern magazine, February 17, 2011.
“Anti-War Billboards Sprouting On Nation's Highways,” Wayne Woolley, The Star Ledger, Monday March 03, 2008.
“Fred Perry,” Julie Haire, Swindle Magazine. The London Issue, Spring 2008.
“White Supremacists by the Numbers,” Brian Palmer, Slate.com, Oct. 29, 2008.
TEACHING
Undergraduate Courses at Northeastern University
Hitler, Germany, and the Holocaust; 1968 in Global Perspective (Capstone); Comparative Fascism (Capstone); Revolution in Theory and Practice; Transnational Popular Culture; World History since 1945; History 1200; History 1000 (Introduction to the Major).
Graduate Courses at Northeastern University
Historical Theory and Methodology; 1968 in Global Perspective; Comparative Fascism; Revolution in Theory and Practice.
Undergraduate Courses at Pomona College
Comparative Fascism; Popular Culture and Daily Life in Cold War Europe; Revolution in Theory and Practice; Western Civilization since 1789.
Undergraduate Course at the University of California, Berkeley1968 (History 103, Junior Proseminar)
SERVICE TO THE UNIVERSITY & ACADEMIC COMMUNITY
Service to the Profession
Environmental Studies Network of the German Studies Association, Co-Coordinator, 2018-2020; Chair 2020-2021.
American Academy in Berlin, External Reviewer for the Berlin Prize 2017-18; 2018-19.
Fritz Stern Dissertation Prize, Chair 2015-16; Committee Member, 2014-15
Council for European Studies Pre-Dissertation Fellowship, Committee Member, 2012-13.
Manuscript reviewer for Berghahn Books, Bloomsbury, Cambridge University Press, Central European History, Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies, Contemporary European History, Cultural Dynamics, European Review of History, German Studies Review, International Review of Social History, Journal of Left History, Journal of Modern History, McGraw Hill Publishing, Nebraska University Press, Oxford University Press, Princeton University Press, Routledge.
Service to the University/College/Department
Chair of History, Northeastern University, Spring 2020-present.
Interim Chair of History, Northeastern University, Fall 2019; Chair of History, Spring 2020-
CSSH Research Development Initiative Committee, Northeastern University, Committee Member, Spring 2015.
Director of Graduate Studies, Department of History, Northeastern University, 2014-2015.
Chair, Full Professor Promotion Committee, Department of History, Northeastern University, 2014.
Ad Hoc Graduate Curriculum Committee, College of Social Sciences and Humanities 2013-14.
Ad Hoc Working Group on Scholarly Journals and Presses, Department of History Fall 2013.
Member, ad hoc Graduate Curriculum Committee in CSSH 2013.
Interim Director of Graduate Studies Fall 2013.
Member, Chair’s Advisory Committee 2011-12.
Member, Latin American Search Committee 2011-12.
Director of Graduate Studies 2010-2012.
Member, Graduate Committee 2008-2011.
Member, World History Search Committee 2006-7.
Member, African History Search Committee 2006-7.
Member, Undergraduate Committee 2006-9.
Faculty Advisor, Phi Alpha Theta Honors Society 2006-9.
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS AND AFFILIATIONS
American Historical Association
German Studies Association