Hallo zusammen,
If anyone is interested in making the drive, you are welcome to attend these two events at
the Department of Germanic Studies at UT Austin.
Viele Grüße,
Dr. D
--
Stammtisch conversation hour, fall 2023: Wednesdays 3-4pm in MH 4.01.01
German Club, fall 2023: Thursdays 2:30-3:30pm, location TBD
Subscribe to the UTSA German
list-serv<https://lists.it.utsa.edu/postorius/lists/german.lists.it.ut...
(info) and German Club
GroupMe<https://groupme.com/join_group/90467044/tFIhb7qF>
(student contact and conversations)
Study abroad in Dresden: summer
2024<https://studyabroad.utsa.edu/index.cfm?FuseAction=Programs.ViewPr...
Devon Donohue-Bergeler, Ph.D.
Professor of Instruction
Director of the German Program
Pronouns: she, her, hers
The University of Texas at San Antonio
Dept. of Modern Languages and Literatures
One UTSA Circle
San Antonio, TX 78249-3209
MH 4.02.06
devon.donohue-bergeler@utsa.edu<mailto:devon.donohue-bergeler@utsa.edu>
UTSA Faculty
Profile<https://colfa.utsa.edu/faculty/profiles/donohue-bergeler-devon...
Goethe Institute Coach
Profile<https://www.goethe.de/ins/us/de/spr/unt/ffd/opd/coa/oco.html>
[cid:329f155d-6803-4b85-bf2f-1c2521f70e32]<https://tu-dresden.de/studium/nach-dem-studium/regional/weltkarte>
________________________________
From: Kit Belgum <belgum(a)austin.utexas.edu>
Please see the two events with author Thomas Meinecke that will take place (in German)
here at UT in about a month. These are open to you and your students (and anyone else you
think might be interested).
Best,
Kit
Tomboy Revisited
Reading and discussion with Thomas Meinecke
Event is in German
October 30, 2023
5:00 - 6:30 p.m.
BUR 337
University of Texas at Austin
Thomas Meinecke's second novel, "Tomboy" (1997), is considered today in the
German-speaking world as the first "theory novel" and simultaneously as one of
the earliest ones that earnestly engages with Judith Butler's deconstructive feminism,
apart from the more satirical genre of the "campus novel." Science fiction,
quite literally. Meinecke's subsequent novels, despite various thematic directions,
remained methodologically and politically committed to Butler's theorems. The
characters in Meinecke's novels engage in conversations within the narrative, which is
written in the present tense, discussing the current developments in Queer Studies,
occasionally even challenging Butler. Meinecke's penchant for pop culture references
means that ideologically contaminated passages, such as misogynistic narratives from the
early 20th century, also flow through his novels. This fact led to "Tomboy"
receiving a trigger warning in Warwick, UK. It will be interesting to engage with the
author in this event about such currents and undercurrents.
---
Texas Germans in Thomas Meinecke's newest novel
Reading and discussion with Thomas Meinecke
Event is in German
November 1, 2023
5:00 - 6:30 p.m.
BUR 337
University of Texas at Austin
The "Lateiner" colonies, or, utopian colonies, established by idealistic German
immigrants in the mid-19th century in central Texas, form a recurring motif in Thomas
Meinecke's novels. He has researched this topic multiple times in Texas, speaking with
the descendants of communist communes (mostly in Texas German), recording many interviews
with them, and also searching for and finding sources in Texan libraries. Excursions into
the Hill Country led him to places like Bettina on the Llano River, named after the German
poet Bettina von Arnim. Standing on the abandoned bluff of the settlement, which was
abandoned after only a year, you can see the ruins of a stone house nearby, most likely
the schoolhouse of the neighboring town of Leiningen. Cut. Thomas Meinecke's next
novel begins in front of the Hotel zur Post in Amorbach, Odenwald, the favorite place of
Theodor W. Adorno, but it soon encounters the ruling Leiningen family residing in the
town, as it immediately becomes clear that they were central figures in the
"Association for the Protection of German Immigrants in Texas." In this event,
Thomas Meinecke will provide insight into his current work on this novel.