People
Graduate Students in German
Sven-Ole Andersen
Sven-Ole Andersen (M.A. Univ. of Connecticut); is a Ph.D. candidate
working on his dissertation, which explores Faust themes in contemporary
Hollywood film.
His research interests include 19th-century and modern
literature, the history of subjectivity, cinema, as well as language
pedagogy. He has presented papers on these topics at several conferences,
including the MLA and SAMLA. Apart from his publications on Second Language
Acquisition and Contemporary Culture, Sven is using new media to impart
his passion for literature and academics to a broader public. His real
life experience as a radio and TV news journalist has been a tremendous
help to make teaching his classes more interesting and to prepare his
students for their own professional future. He teaches all levels of
Beginning German, including the online course Discover German, as well
as Communication for Engineers in UF's Writing Program.
Presentations:
"The Thin Red Line: Students? Behavior and Teachers? possibilities?
Workshop on teaching methodologies. Dept. of Romance Languages, UF October
2005.
"Poems, Permanency, and Peril: Homage to Peter Huchel" SAMLA
Atlanta, GA November 4-6, 2005.
"From Goethe To Google: Subjectivity & Addiction 1800/2000"
Southeast Conference on Foreign Languages and Literatures (Stetson University)
March 2-4, 2006.
"Everything Is Possible: Arousing Students. Interest in Second
Language Acquisition" Conference at Georgia Southern Univ./ Southeast
Conference on Literature & Languages
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Sven-Ole Andersen
Ana Maria Andrei
Ana-Maria Andrei is an M.A. student concurrently pursuing a Ph.D. in
philosophy at UF. She expects to defend her philosophy dissertation titled “The
Nature and Metaphysical Significance of the Explanatory Gap” in
the spring of 2009.
Her
interests in the field of Germanic Studies include German philosophy,
the German novel (especially in relationship to Poetic Realism and Modernism)
and literary theory.
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Hendrik Aulbach
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Aulbach
Jonathan Barnes
Jonathan Barnes is a native Floridian from Orlando. His interest for
the German language and culture began in high school. He received his
BA in German from the University of South Florida. In 2005, in addition
to completing his MA, he also received a Graduate Student Teaching Award.
Jonathan spent 2005-2006 at the Johannes Gutenberg Universität in
Mainz with a stipend from the VDAC. He is currently working
on his dissertation, which analyses the representation of American military
in post-war German film. In his free time he enjoys politics, travel,
cooking, working out, and fishing.
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Olga Birioukova, MA Student
Olga Birioukova was born and raised in Russia, where she studied philology
and linguistics and received her BA at Leo Tolstoy Tula State University
in 2000. She is presently working towards the MA in German integrating
it with Modern European Studies. Her research interests include modern
German and Russian literature, translations and literary interpretations.
Jennifer Coenen
Presentations:
"Representations of Rape in Postwar German Cinema" FSU Annual
Film and Literature Conference, Tallahassee, FL February 2006.
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Britta Herdegen
Britta Herdegen is working on her dissertation that deals with the treatment
of the body and the intersection of genres in German non-fiction and
fiction film. Britta has presented at numerous conferences including
the Southeast Conference of Foreign Language and Literature, Southwest/Texas
Popular Culture Conference and the Florida State University Annual Film
and Literature Conference. She has a BS in Public Relations from the
University of Florida College Journalism and Communications and a MA
in German Language and Literature. She has taught beginning German, courses
in UF’s Writing Program and Center for Written and Oral Communication,
and online advanced business courses through the University of South
Florida as an adjunct instructor.
Presentations:
"The Duality of the Image in Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the
Will" The 17th Annual Conference on Foreign Language and Literature.
Stetson University, March 4, 2006.
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Britta Herdegen
Craig Herr
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Will Lehman
Will Lehman received his PhD in German in May, 2008. His dissertation,
entitled "Germanness, the Nation, and its Other," explores
the ways in which post-war German nationality is staged--in both film
and literature--in the exotic space of Latin America. He has accepted
a position as assistant professor of German in the Modern Languages Department
at Western Carolina University. His research interests include German-Jewish
intersections, Intercultural and Transnational Studies, Postcolonialism,
New German Cinema, and Language pedagogy, where his focus is on the effective
integration of technology in the classroom.
Presentations:
"Deutsche Gauchos and Schlemiels Argentinos: Cultural
Hybridity in A. Schenker and R. Schopflocher" Southeast Conference
on Foreign Languages and Literatures (Stetson University) March 2-4,
2006
" 'Defragging' Modernity in Richard Linklater's Waking Life(2001)"
American Comparative Literature Association Conference (Princeton University)
March 24-26, 2006
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Aneka Meier
Aneka Meier has successfully defended her dissertation, entitled “Working
Girls: Fictional Representation of Female Office Workers in Weimar Germany,” and
will receive her Ph.D. in German Studies in Summer 2008. Besides Weimar
Germany and women’s/gender studies, her principal research interests
are in the area of 20th century literature and culture, as well as instructional
technology. She has accepted a position as Assistant Professor of German
in the Foreign Language Department at East Stroudsburg University.
Presentations:
"Destinies behind: Type-Writers: Gender and Technology
in Novels of Weimar Berlin." Southeast Conference on Foreign Languages
and Literatures, Stetson University, March 2-4, 2006
"A Time Before Ally, Bridget, Carrie & Co.: The Single Working
Girl in Weimar Berlin as an Icon of Modernity, Urbanity, and Mass Culture."
SAMLA Annual Convention, Atlanta, GA, November 2005
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Peter Mersch
Peter Mersch received his MA in Germanic Studies at UF in 2008. His primary
interests lie in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, from the
French Revolution to the end of the Weimar Republic. He is particularly
interested in the crisis of identity, subjectivity, and the changes
brought about by the event of 1789-1815 and how they are played out
in German society as portrayed through literature. In his research,
Peter Mersch has addressed the works of Gottfried Keller, Ludwig Tieck,
and Joseph Eichendorff as pertaining to the concept of /Excentrizität
/as well as Goethe in his regard to ancient Greece and questions of
/Humanität/.
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Fayola Neely
Fayola Neely is a native of South Carolina, where she received her Bachelors
in German and Psychology at Furman University. Her interests include
the literary voices of diverse groups in German culture and society and
minority cultural production, as well as second language acquisition
and foreign language pedagogy. During the academic year 2007-08 Fayola
Neely was studying at the Universität Mannheim in Germany, where
she spent two semesters before returning to complete her M.A. at the
University of Florida.
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Joe Rockelmann
Email Joe Rockelmann
Matthias Ross
Email Matthias Ross
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