Masterclasses, Keynote Lectures & Workshops
The IPP organises masterclasses and workshops with renowned professors and researchers from around the world. They share their current research with our candidates and discuss contemporary developments in literary theory and history from different perspectives. Some masterclasses are organised as part of the defence of one of our candidates, creating synergies that benefit all members of the centre.
Previous masterclasses, keynote lectures & workshops
Dr. Katarzyna Macedulska (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland)
Workshop: Literature in the Last Best Place: Montana’s Nature Writing
29.10.2025, 14.00 - 16.00 - SR 109 (GGK/GCSC Building)

Prof Rolf J. Goebel (University of Alabama)
Workshop: Looking Back and Looking Forward in Literary Studies
09.07.2025, 14.00 - 16.00 - SR 126 (GGK/GCSC Building)

Prof Dr Timothy C. Baker (University of Aberdeen)
Keynote: Rereading Childhood: Autobiography, Criticism, and Memory
04.06.2025, 18.00 - 20.00 - MFR (GGK/GCSC Building)

Prof Dr Mary Ann Snyder-Körber (University of Würzburg)
Mobile Feminisms: Gender, Social Media, Transnational Interactions
14.01.2025, 15.00 - 17.00 - SR 126 (GGK/GCSC Building)

The presentation phase of the workshop understands itself as two-part project report: first, reporting on a two-year collaborative project in which graduate students from Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi and Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg worked on the questions posed by mobile feminisms, and, second, contributing to the larger ongoing project of reinvestigating the cultural studies tradition and retooling its approaches for the contemporary world.
Closer consideration of case studies identified and explored in the transnational Mobile Feminisms project creates the bridge to the more participatory phase of the workshop in which we can think about teaching-based collaboration as a motor of cultural studies scholarship
Prof Dr Frans-Willem Korsten (Leiden University)
Why Humanities Matter: Law and Literature and the Long-Term Determination to Fight for Justice
15.01.2025, 16.00 - 18.00 - SR 109 (GGK/GCSC Building)

The humanities are being targeted and threatened globally. Major, famous universities have eliminated their faculty of Humanities, governments have questioned what value the Humanities might have, and Humanities faculties in the Netherlands are currently eliminating entire programs. To be defensive in such circumstances is silly. We had better check where the humanities are coming from, historically speaking, and see what their role should be in the current circumstances. For those who want to point to humanists as the origin of the humanities (which is historically speaking questionable), it is worthwhile noting that all the major humanists were at some point banned, threatened, or simply killed. Historically, the disciplinary origin of the humanities is to be found in the 19th century European universities, with their task to help found and invigorate the nation-states and their colonial expansion, whether globally or on the continent.
The question then is what the humanities’ political task is today if a seemingly self-evident support by the state is crumbling. Should the Humanities still proceed in producing civility? Enlarging criticality? Strengthening commitment? Such questions immediately imply other questions: in the service of whom, and which or what kind of political actors would have an interest and the determination to still support the Humanities? Are not aggressive right-wing parties claiming to know the proper way to civility; are they not extremely critical; do they not require substantial commitment? In the context of literature and law the path that lies ahead requires that we keep on analyzing the relation between art, law and justice in relation to (manipulated) affective households, on a micro and macrolevel. It requires the combination of theory and praxis, or the willingness to participate in forms of activism, for instance to help realize (underground) archives that protect the transmission of the kinds of knowledge we care for in the service of a justice. And it requires a willingness to help realize a culture of law that is no longer anthropocentric. In short: what Rudolph von Jhering called the struggle for law has acquired a new relevance.
Prof Dr Marco Caracciolo (Ghent University)
Challenges of Complexity in Contemporary Anglophone Fiction
26.11.2024, 18:00 - 20.00 - Conference Room (GGK/GCSC Building) / Online

Whether it is understood formally or cognitively, complexity is often seen as a desirable feature in the practices surrounding literary interpretation. But complexity can also prove threatening, overwhelming, or politically paralyzing, as authors including Samuel Arbesman and Eva Haifa Giraud have pointed out. In this talk, I will look at a range of contemporary Anglophone fictions that interrogate what one might think of as the dark sides of complexity. These novels tend to probe complexity and its limits in relation to pressing issues such as climate change or global mobility. My examples will include novels by Hanya Yanagihara (To Paradise) and Mohsin Hamid (Exit West). Combining narrative theory and New Formalism, I will explore how literature uses formal means to capture complexity as undesirable implication, and how such formal resources may prompt a (re)negotiation of how complexity is imagined and experienced affectively in real-world terms as well.
Everyone is welcome to attend, you need not be a member of the IPP or affiliated with the GGK/GCSC. Link to online access: https://webconf.hrz.uni-giessen.de/b/isa-sdu-rca-df6
Moderator: Prof. Dr. Jan Alber
Dr Mary Harrod (University of Warwick)
Out of Time: The Politics of Fantasy in French Screen Romance of the 2010s
18.10.2023, 10.00 - 12.00 - SR 109 (GGK/GCSC Building)

In this lecture, I will put concepts of romantic fantasy and transnational (post)feminism into dialogue with one another through the case study of contemporary French filmed romantic comedy. More specifically, I will explore the way in which the genre’s recently amplified embrace of fantastic tropes – notably linked to time travel and atemporality more broadly – while in some ways mirroring global trends, responds to a situation whereby greater demands for gender equality have troubled Gallic cultures of intimacy.
Focalising a range of differently positioned case studies, the masterclass will draw on concepts of romance as both textual and social genre to consider the narrative and iconographic contortions required to keep the former alive as the latter comes under increasing fire, as well as fault lines within these and thus the shifting social context that they instantiate. Significantly, this optic encompasses concepts of transnational (market) identity, bearing in mind the intersectionality between generational (temporal) and cultural (geo-spatial) difference recently foregrounded by French responses to #MeToo, and simultaneously representing a classic topos of the fantastic mode. In this regard, the lecture will finally interrogate the recent trend from the point of view of affective theories of cosmopolitanism and felt internationalism, especially as these intersect with popular feminism as an increasingly global concept, to ask whether the trans-local marketisation of ‘progressive’ discourses of gendered intimacy depoliticises these.
Bionote: Mary Harrod is Associate Professor in French Studies at the University of Warwick. She has authored multiple books: From France with Love: Gender and Identity in French Romantic Comedy (I.B. Tauris, 2015), Heightened Genre and Women’s Filmmaking in Hollywood (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021), and co-edited the following collections: The Europeanness of European Cinema: Identity, Meaning, Globalization (I.B. Tauris, 2015, with Mariana Liz and Alissa Timoshkina); Women Do Genre in Film and Television (Routledge, 2017, with Katarzyna Paszkiewicz), Winner of British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies Best Edited Collection Prize 2019; and Imagining ‘We’ in the Age of ‘I’: Romance and Social Bonding in Contemporary Culture (Routledge, 2021, with Diane Negra and Suzanne Leonard). She is also the co-chief General Editor of French Screen Studies, with Ginette Vincendeau.
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Dr. Stefano Rozzoni (University of Bergamo)
Emerging Critical Perspectives on the Digital in Literary and Cultural Studies
05.07.2023, 10.00 - 12.00 - Konferezraum 001 (GGK/GCSC Building)
Bionote: Stefano Rozzoni is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Bergamo. He has previously worked as a postdoc Assistant and lecturer at Universität Graz, Austria. His current postdoctoral project is dedicated to exploring human-nonhuman relational ethics in contemporary anglophone literary and cultural texts (2010-present) through the lens of the Digital Environmental Humanities. His research interests encompass environmental narratives, posthumanism, and the pastoral genre within British Modernism and contemporary literature and culture. His work includes various media and covers topics such as Franciscanism, ecology, and economics; urban and rural spaces; human-nonhuman relationalities; and ecofascisms.
Dr. Stefano Rozzoni (University of Bergamo)
Affirmative Narratives for a Post-PhD Career: A Group Discussion
04.07.2023, 18.00 - 19.30 - SR 326 (GGK/GCSC Building)
Envisioning a scholarly career, both within and outside academia, after completing a PhD can feel daunting. Dominant cultural narratives often paint a discouraging picture, emphasizing the systemic difficulties of the job market and the uncertainties stemming from current economic instabilities. However, amidst these accounts, there are numerous success stories of young researchers who have pursued fulfilling postdoctoral positions. While these stories often go unnoticed, shedding light on them can provide alternative perspectives and offer guidance for planning and projecting one's future career paths.
Bionote: Stefano Rozzoni is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Bergamo. He has previously worked as a postdoc Assistant and lecturer at Universität Graz, Austria. His current postdoctoral project is dedicated to exploring human-nonhuman relational ethics in contemporary anglophone literary and cultural texts (2010-present) through the lens of the Digital Environmental Humanities. His research interests encompass environmental narratives, posthumanism, and the pastoral genre within British Modernism and contemporary literature and culture. His work includes various media and covers topics such as Franciscanism, ecology, and economics; urban and rural spaces; human-nonhuman relationalities; and ecofascisms.
Prof. Brian Richardson (University of Maryland)
Representations of Readers in Modern Fiction: Paradoxes and Dilemmas
24.05.2023, 16.00 - 18.00 - Konferezraum 001 (GGK/GCSC Building)

Bionote: Brian Richardson is a Professor in the English department of the University of Maryland, where he teaches modern literature and narrative theory. He is the author or co-author of seven books, including Unnatural Voices: Extreme Narration in Modern and Contemporary Fiction (2006, Perkins Prize winner); Unnatural Narratives: Theory, History, and Practice (2015), A Poetics of Plot for the Twenty-first Century: Theorizing Unruly Narratives (2019), and Essays on Narrative and Fictionality: Reassessing Nine Central Concepts (2021), a collection of his recent articles on several basic narratological subjects. His latest book, The Reader of Modernist Fiction, is scheduled to be published in 2024. Richardson has edited or co-edited ten collections of essays on narrative theory, including the anthologies Narrative Beginnings: Theories and Practices (2008) and with Jan Alber, Unnatural Narratology: Extensions, Revisions, and Challenges. He guest-edited special issues of Style on Concepts of Narrative (34.2, 2000) and on The Implied Author (44.1, 2011), an issue of Conradiana on Conrad and the Reader (35.1, 2003), and a group of essays on Unnatural Narrative and Feminist Theory in Storyworlds (2016). An issue of Style devoted to an analysis of his work appeared in December 2017. He has published over 100 articles; these have explored reader-response theory, narrative sequence, endings, character, fictionality, realism, African American and postcolonial narratives, the poetics of drama, and the narratives of literary history. His work has been translated into French, German, Czech, Portuguese, Danish, Magyar, Italian, Spanish, Turkish, Arabic, and Chinese. In 2011 he served as President of the International Society for the Study of Narrative.