DCF94280-E8F7-F166-A62F886D097067AC
DD020F53-C98F-50DB-CEDFC9E5288EEEAA

About the Major

Germany’s important contemporary position, cultural legacy, and turbulent history at the center of European affairs make it an important topic of study for a wide range of interests: language and literature, government and diplomacy, international trade, science and technology. German is one of the major official languages of the European Union and is recognized as an important language of business, particularly in Eastern Europe. At Hamilton, German studies majors work closely with professors in small classes and spend at least one semester studying in Germany.

A Sampling of Courses

German Studies

First-Term German

Introduction to the German language. Exercises in aural comprehension, speaking, reading and writing reinforced by short cultural and literary texts. No previous knowledge of German required.

Explore these select courses:

Continued development of German grammar and vocabulary with cultural and literary texts, including works by Kafka, Dürrenmatt and Brecht, and song texts by contemporary Liedermacher. Practice in oral and written work.

Investigation of the Bauhaus from its origins in WWI to its 1933 shutdown by the Nazis. Examination of the relationship between art and technology, along with the social and political implications of modern design. Topics include the Bauhaus’ interdisciplinary and experimental approach, its position within larger intellectual debates of early twentieth-century Germany, and its impact on modern art and design across the world.

The course is an intro level survey of the history of the cinematic industry in Germany from the 1920s to today, which juxtaposes the masterworks of German cinema with films that occupy a more marginal position in the canon. In class discussion and course assignments, we develop the formal vocabulary for developing historical arguments from critical scene analyses and discover how film not only comments on, but generates meaning of social and political events in 20th and 21stcentury Germany. The course includes films by Robert Wiene, Lotte Reiniger, Josef von Báky, Leni Riefenstahl, Josef Mach, Margarethe von Trotta, Werner Herzog, Angelina Maccarone, and Fatih Akin.

This course is an introductory study of key writings by Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Sigmund Freud, three authors indicating revolution of critical thought in the 19 th and early 20th centuries. The goal of this course is to develop a tool-kit for engaging with Critical Theory and contemporary discourses in the humanities and social sciences. We will investigate historical and philosophical foundations of key concepts such as "interpretation," "subject," "history," "society," "morality," and "aesthetics."

Study of post-1945 literature with focus on Austria, the emergence of two contrasting Germanies, and the Neuanschluss leading to unification. Texts by Bachmann, Bernhard, Böll, Grass, Seghers, Wolf and others. Taught in German.

Meet Our Faculty

Alan Cafruny

Henry Platt Bristol Professor of International Relations

acafruny@hamilton.edu

International political economy, European politics, U.S. foreign policy

John Eldevik

Professor of History, Director of German Studies

jeldevik@hamilton.edu

social and economic history of the early Middle Ages; history of law and mechanisms of conflict resolution; the perceptions of non-Christian peoples and lands in medieval manuscript culture

Christiane Fischer

Visiting Assistant Professor of German Studies

cfische1@hamilton.edu

Twentieth and twenty-first century Germanic literatures, cinema studies, media theory, narratives of migration, translation studies

Marianne Janack

John Stewart Kennedy Professor of Philosophy

mjanack@hamilton.edu

epistemology; philosophy of science; philosophy of mind; theories of identity; feminist theory; philosophy and literature; American pragmatism

Michael Lipkin

Visiting Assistant Professor of German Studies

mlipkin@hamilton.edu

literary realism; ethics, political, and social history of Germany; documentary literature

Franziska Schweiger

Assistant Professor of German Studies

fschweig@hamilton.edu

19th and 20th century German literature and culture, history of craft and technology, theory of the novel, material culture, gender and sexuality

Modern and Postmodern Jewish, Israeli, European, and American prose fiction, drama, and contemporary literary theory

Bryson Tedford

Lecturer in German Studies

ltedford@hamilton.edu

18th century German aesthetics, theater history, German architecture, visual and poetic modernism, performance studies, classicism and romanticism

Careers After Hamilton

Hamilton graduates who concentrated in German studies are pursuing careers in a variety of fields, including:

  • William H. Laird Professor of German, Carleton College
  • Webmaster, IBM Corp.
  • Vice President, Deutsche Bank Americas
  • Senior Vice President, Coca-Cola Company
  • President, World Emergency Relief
  • Head of Languages, St. Paul's School
  • General Counsel, Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale
  • Director, International Technology Office, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  • Director, Copyright, Public Broadcasting Service
  • Designer, EuroEast Tours
  • Bureau Chief, Financial Times

Explore Hamilton Stories

Frank Sciacca

Sciacca Shares His Collection

Associate Professor of German and Russian Languages and Literatures (Russian) Emeritus Frank Sciacca recently gifted a collection of books related to Ukrainian arts and culture to The Icon Museum and Study Center.

Two students talking at a table in Commons dining hall.

Speaking of Grabbing a Meal …

Amidst the bustling crowds at Commons and McEwen dining halls, language faculty and students sit around a table to enjoy a meal while conversing in their chosen studied language. Hamilton’s “language tables,” as they are known, provide both valuable speaking experience and community building opportunities.

Charlotte Carstens ’16 during a fellowship in Berlin.

Follow The Passion (German), Find the Career (Foreign Service)

The sequence of events lined up perfectly. In July, Charlotte Carstens ’16 finished up a five-month fellowship at the German Bundestag in Berlin just in time to begin a two-year master’s program in German and European studies at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service.

Contact

Department Name

German Studies Program

Contact Name

John Eldevik, Director

Office Location
198 College Hill Road
Clinton, NY 13323

Help us provide an accessible education, offer innovative resources and programs, and foster intellectual exploration.

Site Search