Graduate Student Symposium

Annually, Spring Semester • Location: Varies

 

This symposium is an annual event organized by graduate students as a means to present papers before their peers in a semi-formal atmosphere. This event is open to all Washington University students and faculty, as well as to the public. Light refreshments are provided. For more information, or for a program, please email the graduate student representatives for 2011-2012, Petra Watzke and Angineh Djavadghazaryans. 

Graduate Student Symposia

Number

Semester

Title

21st SP12 Emotion, Affekt, Gefühl: Imagining Feeling in the German Context
20th SP 11 Transgressing Communities
19th SP 10 De/ciphering Id/entities
18th SP 09 Representing Crisis: Narrative, Aesthetics, and Space
17th SP 08 Images of Development, Development of Images
16th SP 07 Beauty and the Beast: Aesthetics, Landscapes and Cultural Upheaval
15th SP 06 Memory, Representation, and Insanity
14th SP 05 Reflections: Perspectives on Theory, Literature and Film
13th SP 04 Outside the Inside: Representations of Trauma, Space, and Identity
12th SP 03 Ich werde, Sie sind, wir waren: Constructing Identity through Word and Image
11th SP 02 Mapping Boundaries, Crossing Borders: Explorations in German Literature and Film
10th SP 01 Cultural Kaleidoscope: A Spectrum of Graduate Student Thought
9th SP 00 Deformed Ideals and Idealized Deformities: Changing Constructions from Plato to Fassbinder
8th SP 99 Challenging Centers and Deliniating Margins: Voices of Authority in German Literature
7th SP 98 Peer-Ceptions: Surveying German Literary Landscapes
6th SP 97 Sites Under Construction: From Handschrift to Hypertext
5th SP 96 Creating Resonances: Twelve Variations on a Graduate Student Theme
4th SP 95 From Lancelot to Hip Hop: Con/Tested Sites in German Studies
3rd SP 94 Exploring Centering Margins: Comparative Studies of Gender, Epistolary Writing, and Transition
2nd SP 93 Große und Kleine: Bridging the Gap between the Canon and the Non-Canon through the Centuries
1st SP 92 Baroque, Bodies, and Brunch: Colloquium on Gender and the Early Modern