CCGES > Category:Events
Posted: March 20, 2009
On the centenary Sigmund Freud’s Analysis of a Phobia in a Five-Year Old Boy (1909), Frank Scherer (PhD candidate Social and Political Thought) will present a talk entitled “Zarafa or Little Big Hans: Some Reflections on the Centenary of Sigmund Freud’s First Child Analysis and the Viscissitudes of the Castration Complex. Here he will reexamine this work with a view to shedding light on its hitherto unexamined facets including the Orient of race, gender and sexuality that emerges from its pages or the stunning editorial resurrection of the phallic mother/woman at the hands of his daughter Anna Freud.
Location: 305 York Lanes
Time: 2:30 – 4:00 pm
All are welcome, but attendees are asked to RSVP to ccges@york.ca
Posted: March 19, 2009
Together with York’s Centre for Human Rights, Israel and Golda Koschitzky Centre for Jewish Studies, Hillel@York, and the Office of the Master-Founders College, CCGES will be presenting a program of events to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day on Tuesday, April 21st. These events will take place from noon to 4:30 pm in the Assembly Hall (Rm. 152) of Founders College – click here for a campus map.
Dr. Felicia Carmelly, a Holocaust survivor, will be on hand to share her experiences and films related to the genocides in both Rwanda and Darfur will be screened as well. For more program details, please visit http:www.yorku.ca/rights.
These Holocaust Remembrance Day events are all open to the public.
For more information on this program, please contact Linda Grobovsky, Centre for Human Rights, lgp@yorku.ca
Posted:
CCGES, the German Section of the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics and the European Studies Programme are pleased to be hosting a talk by Prof. Waltraud Maierhofer of the University of Iowa on Wednesday, April 8th. Prof. Maierhofer’s presentation will be entitled “Poisoner, Corrupter, Infanticide . . . What Should I Write? – ‘Anna Göldi – The Last Witch’ and the Fictionality of Trial Records” investigates the film adaptation (1991) of the novel “Anna Göldi—The Last Witch” by Swiss writer Eveline Hasler. Göldi (1734-1782) was the last woman to be put to trial for witchcraft in German-speaking countries in the late 18th century. Recent historical research has made it clear that Anna Göldi was the victim of a power struggle between two of the leading families in the canton of Glarus, and in June 2008, the cantonal administration of Glarus declared its intention to rehabilitate Göldi. Prof. Maierhofer’s deliberations will focus on two aspects of the film, namely the character of the council’s scribe who records the trial and the transformation and role of the trial documents in the film.
Prof. Maierhofer received her Dr. phil. from the University of Regensburg, Germany. She is the Fellow of the Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation and the Field-editor of the Eighteenth-Century Current Bibliography. Among her numerous publications are the books Hexen – Huren – Heldenweiber. Bilder des Weiblichen in Erzähltexten über den Dreißigjährigen Krieg; ‘Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre’ und derRoman des Nebeneinander, and the co-edition of Women Against Napoleon: Historical and Fictional Responses.
Location: TEL Building 0016
Time: 1:30 – 2:20 p.m.
The event has been made possible by the support of the German Studies Programme/York University, the Canadian Centre for German and European Studies, and York’s European Studies Programme. For more information and to RSVP, contact Dr. Diana Spokiene (Ext. 88745; email: spokiene@yorku.ca)
Posted: March 15, 2009
Born 1978 in Yekaterinburg/Russia, Alina Bronsky grew up on the Asian side of the Ural Mountains as well as in Marburg and Darmstadt. After dropping out of her medical studies, she worked as a copywriter and journalist. Her debut novel Scherbenpark, which was nominated for the prestigious Ingeborg Bachmann Prize, is about 17-year-old Sascha who came from Moscow to Germany and lives in the Broken Glass Park, a ghetto of high-rise buildings ruled by its own laws which she breaks with fierce determination. Sascha is a commuter between two worlds and not at home in either of them but sharp-tongued and precocious enough to stand her ground and to take the reader with her on a constantly accelerating journey.
The Munk-Goethe Writers Residency aims to foster German-Canadian exchange on European migration topics.
This reading has been made possible by the Goethe Institut-Toronto, The Munk Centre for International Studies at the University of Toronto, German Studies Programme/York University, the Canadian Centre for German & European Studies, and York’s European Studies Programme.
Time: 12:30 – 2:15 pm
Location: Lounge, Department of Languages, Literatures, Linguistics, S558 Ross Building
Campus Map: click here
For more information please contact:
Dr. Diana Spokiene, Department of Languages, Literatures & Linguistics, York University (Ext. 88745; email: spokiene@yorku.ca)
Posted: March 13, 2009
Born in Ankara in 1961 and living in Germany since 1970, Zafer Senocak is a writer and intellectual whose publications have garnered several German-language literary awards and made him a leading contributor to German discussions of multiculturalism and cultural identity. At each of the two readings he will give while in Toronto, Senocak will read a different selection of literary and essayistic pieces in German and English and discuss the current state of (multi-)cultural life in Germany today.
Door Languages
Date: Monday, March 23, 2009
Time: 12:30-2:15pm
Location: S 558 Ross, York University (Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics)
For a campus map, please click here.
Das Land hinter den Buchstaben / Beyond the Language of the Land
Date: Monday, March 23, 2009
Time: 6:30-8:00pm
Location: Room 208, North House, Munk Centre for International Studies, 1 Devonshire Place, University of Toronto
Both readings are free and open to the public and are made possible by generous funding provided by the German Studies Programme, York University; the German Department, University of Toronto; the Academic Initiative Fund, York Faculty of Arts/ Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics; the Canadian Centre for German and European Studies, and the York University European Studies Programme
For more information and questions please contact Dr. Peter M. McIsaac, Department of Languages, Literatures & Linguistics, York University (416-736-2100 x88747, email: pmcisaac@yorku.ca)
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