
In her book, Women of Chinese Modern Art, Doris Sung talks about how women artists shaped the terrain of the modern art world. In the book talk she also talks with Senior Acquisitions Editor History Rabea Rittgerodt about how she, as an artist, got into academia, how important
art history is to understanding the change of a society fro empire to republic and how education and art can help empower women and shape feminist approaches and international cooperation.
Doris Sung is Assistant Professor of Art History and Asian Art at the University of Alabama.
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Jun 21, 2024
25 min

In this Book Talk Dr. Tremblay tells us what personal situations during his early academic career made him consider writing about the Pink Triangle in the first place and how looking at the topic in global and transregional perspective helped shape his research and understanding of history. In the following discussion he and the series editors Dr. Sabrina Mittermeier and Dr. Bodie Ashton discuss looking at history through a “queer lens”, and how being mindful of language and heritage is a chance and problem for historical researchers on a global scale.
The book "A Badge of Injury. The Pink Triangle as Global Symbol of Memory" analyses gay and lesbian transregional cultural communication networks from the 1970s to the 2000s, focusing on the importance of National Socialism, visual culture, and memory in the queer Atlantic. Provincializing Euro-American queer history, it illustrates how a history of concepts which encompasses the visual offers a greater depth of analysis of the transfer of ideas across regions than texts alone would offer. It also underlines how gay and lesbian history needs to be reframed under a queer lens and understood in a global perspective. A Badge of Injury pinpoints the roles of cultural memory and power in the creation of gay and lesbian transregional narrativ.
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Jun 18, 2024
44 min

Ruhig statt hektisch, lang statt kurz, wort- statt bildlastig, langsam statt schnell, diskursiv statt plakativ: Podcasts sind das ideale Format, um geisteswissenschaftliche Fragen und Thesen zeitgemäß zu kommunizieren — aber wie?!
Podcast-Macher*innen aus den Geisteswissenschaften sehen sich einer Reihe ähnlicher Herausforderungen gegenüber: Der Podcast-Markt ist übersättigt. Die Aufwände sind hoch, die Produktion erfordert vielfältiges Know-How. Denn Podcasting ist deutlich mehr, als einfach nur zwei Leute vor ein Mikrofon zu setzen. Und: Selbst der beste Podcast will vermarktet werden und braucht oft einen langen Atem, um sein Publikum zu finden.
Zum Abschluss der ersten Staffel unseres Wissenschaftspodcasts WAGNIS WISSEN haben wir mit drei Expertinnen zu diesem Thema diskutiert.
Auf dem Podium sprachen:
- Isabel Woop - Head of Production, ACB Stories
- Dr. Kristiane Hasselmann - Geschäftsführerin Sonderforschungsbereich Episteme in Bewegung, Produzentin Wissenschaftspodcast Hinter den Dingen
- Franziska Walser - Journalistin, Moderatorin, Podcastentwicklerin, EINS.STUDIO, rbb, ARD
Die Aufzeichnung ist Teil des rbb Medienmagazins vom 26.02.2024 (Autor: Philipp Nitzsche). Die komplette Sendung ist hier zu hören.
Mar 28, 2024
1 hr 8 min

Dr. Na Li is associated researcher and chair of Public History at the University of Vienna. She is a public historian and urban planning scholar. Her research focuses on public history and urban preservation. During her decade-long work in China, Na Li has pioneered the field of public history in China. In this book talk, she and De Gruyter's history acquisitions editor Rabea Rittgerodt talk about her recent publication Seeing History: Public History in China which came out in late 2023 in the DG series Public History in International Perspectives. Both talk about the challenges and gains of doing public history in China and academia in general and Prof. Li gives solid advice to young scholars thinking about stepping into the field of history/public history.
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Mar 21, 2024
24 min

Today, more than twenty oligarchs serve as heads of state or government in countries such as Russia, South Africa, Lebanon and El Salvador. Many have a net worth in excess of $1 billion, and they all – whether directly or indirectly – impact our daily lives.
Who are the oligarchs and how have they come to dominate our world? What difference does gender make? Is there something “good” to be found in them, or are they just “bad”? And what is it like to interview an oligarch and glimpse their human side? In this book talk, the authors of The Oligarchs’ Grip: Fusing Wealth and Power talk to Stefan Giesen, Editorial Director Business & Economics at De Gruyter. Entrepreneurship expert David Lingelbach and oligarch researcher Valentina Rodríguez Guerra draw upon more than 25 years of research (including conversations with Vladimir Putin and other oligarchs), 16 case studies, and dozens of historical examples in The Oligarchs’ Grip. They develop the first-ever model that reveals the strategies employed by oligarchs to fuse wealth and power and transition between the two.
David Lingelbach is Professor of Entrepreneurship at the Merrick School of Business, University of Baltimore. He was educated at MIT, London School of Economics and Political Science, and the University of Exeter, where he earned his Ph.D. Prior to becoming an academic, David served in senior roles in finance and international development, including as CEO of Bank of America’s businesses in the former Soviet Union. He was a Fulbright Scholar (Myanmar/Burma, 2018-19) and Fulbright Specialist (Colombia, 2021) and has been nominated twice for an Andrew Carnegie Fellowship.
Valentina Rodríguez Guerra is an author, oligarch researcher, and graduate student in business administration, Facultad de Ciencias Económicas, Universidad Nacional de Colombia. She has received awards for her work from NASA and the Colombian Ministry of Education.
Together, they are regular opinion contributors to The Hill on Vladimir Putin and other oligarchs.
Link to the book ► https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111028255/html
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#DeGruyter #oligarch #oligarchy
Nov 21, 2023
22 min

How do we produce knowledge? How do we present it? How can we better understand our societies, past and present? And, ultimately, what is it that makes us us? The study of Modern Languages tackles nothing short of these fundamental questions, exploring the very foundations of what it means to be human.
Moreover, the field is inherently dynamic. Artificial Intelligence tools, such as ChatGPT, have rapidly changed our perspective on language as something uniquely human. Social media have created new ways of reading and consuming information. Concurrently, emerging forms of scholarship are reshaping the way we approach Modern Languages.
We wanted to learn more about the discipline in an ever-changing and increasingly digital world, so we sat down with Professors Andy Byford and Claudia Nitschke from Durham University, UK. Andy Byford holds the position of Professor of Russian Studies, while Claudia Nitschke is a Professor of German at Durham’s School of Modern Languages and Cultures. Both have authored numerous publications and are serving as editors of the upcoming “Handbook of Modern Languages”, to be published by De Gruyter in 2024.
Alexandra Koronkai-Kiss, Editorial Communications Manager at De Gruyter, conducted the interview, which is also available as a video and podcast.
Link to the interview transcript on our blog De Gruyter Conversations ►
https://blog.degruyter.com/modern-languages-in-a-changing-world-an-interview-with-andy-byford-and-claudia-nitschke
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Nov 21, 2023
27 min

Grün stimmt hoffnungsvoll, ein kühles Blau lässt uns frösteln. Farben
beeinflussen unsere Stimmung, unser Verhalten und sogar körperliche
Empfindungen. Die Welt durch unsere Augen ist bunt, doch welche
Eindrücke entstehen im Sehapparat und welche im Gehirn? Sind Farben
überhaupt „real“?
Nicht immer können wir unseren Augen trauen, sagt der Chemiker und
Autolackdesigner Werner Rudolf Cramer. In seinem neuen Buch „Lila macht
kleine Füße“ beschreibt er moderne Erkenntnisse der Farbwahrnehmung und
betrachtet sie sowohl aus physikalischer als auch aus physiologischer
Sicht.
In unserem aktuellen Book Talk hatte Ute Skambraks, Content Editor STEM
bei De Gruyter, die Gelegenheit mit Werner Rudolf Cramer in die
faszinierende Welt der Farben einzutauchen.
Link zum Buch ►
https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110793918/htmlContact us ► https://www.degruyter.com/publishing/about-us/contact?lang=enSubscribe ► https://www.youtube.com/c/DegruyterPublishers
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#DeGruyter #WernerRudolfCramer #Farben #Farbwahrnehmung #Autolackdesign
Nov 20, 2023
20 min

Wie wäre es, wenn Software-Pionierin Ada Lovelace aus
dem 19. Jahrhundert in der Jetztzeit landet und ihrem Freund Charles
Babbage, einem Computer-Vorreiter aus England, Briefe schreibt? Darin
erklärt sie alles, was man über das Thema Digitalisierung wissen muss –
verständlich für jede und jeden. Es geht um Nullen und Einsen, um
Verschlüsselung und virtuelle Realität, um Bitcoin und Blockchain, um
Handys und Hypertext. Genau das macht Anna. Unter dem Pseudonym Ada L. startet sie einen Blog über das, was die digitale Welt im Innersten zusammenhält. Die digitale Nomadin arbeitet in Thailand und Australien, im Elektrobus reist sie durch Europa. Auf ihrer Tour knüpft sie Kontakte, verliebt sich und kommt üblen Machenschaften auf die Spur. Dabei gerät sie selbst in Gefahr. Hilfe kommt von Freunden, von Fremden – und immer wieder von Hühnern. Hinter Anna wiederum stecken Magdalena Kayser-Meiller, Zeitungsredakteurin bei den Nürnberger Nachrichten, und Dieter Meiller, Professor für Medieninformatik an der OTH Amberg-Weiden. Sie sind die Autoren des Buchs “Unterwegs im Cybercamper: Annas Reise in die digitale Welt” . In unserem neuesten Book Talk durfte Ute Skambraks, Content Editor STEM bei De Gruyter, mit den beiden in Annas Welt eintauchen.
Link zu Annas Blog ► postlagernd.org/Link zum Buch ► www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.…96/html#overviewContact us ► www.degruyter.com/publishing/about…/contact?lang=en
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#DeGruyter #MagdalenaKayserMeiller #DieterMeiller #Digitalisierung
Aug 3, 2023
19 min

„Gesund beginnt im Mund“ besagt eine bekannte Volksweisheit, der wir in
unserem neusten Book Talk mit Dr. Diana Kessler auf den Grund gehen
wollten. Im Interview fühlten wir der Expertin auf den Zahn und sprachen
mit ihr über die „Milliardenstadt“ in unserem Mund – das orale
Mikrobiom – sowie über Zahnarztangst und vieles mehr.
Dr. Kessler ist seit 1991 in Mannheim als Zahnärztin tätig und
beschäftigt sich schon lange mit dem Zusammenhang zwischen Mund- und
Allgemeingesundheit. Sie hält Vorträge zu dem Thema und ist seit 10
Jahren Teil des Teams der Diabetes-Tagesklinik des St. Josefskrankenhaus
in Heidelberg. Seit 2016 organisiert sie außerdem regelmäßig die
interdisziplinären Fortbildungen „Ärzte und Zahnärzte im Dialog“.
In ihrem neuesten Buch „Von Mund zu Gesund. Wie ein gesunder Mund vor
Krankheiten schützt“ nimmt sie uns mit auf die Reise durch die
faszinierende Welt unserer Mundhöhle und führt uns auch in weiter
entfernte Regionen unseres Körpers, die damit in Beziehung stehen. Ihr
ist es wichtig den Menschen, auch über den Bereich der Zahnmedizin
hinaus, als funktionierendes Ganzes zu begreifen. In Anlehnung an
Paracelsus – „Der Arzt verbindet deine Wunden. Dein innerer Arzt aber
wird dich gesunden.“ – erläutert sie darüber hinaus, wie wir unsere
Mundhöhle gesund halten können.
Kristin Berber-Nerlinger, Senior Acquisitions Editor bei De Gruyter,
sprach mit Diana Kessler über ihr Buch. (Und es hat gar nicht weh
getan!)
Link to the book ► https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111026299/html
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#DeGruyter #DianaKessler #Zahngesundheit #Mundgesundheit
Jul 3, 2023
21 min

Early on in the Arab Spring, a blog that had already existed for several years went viral: A Gay Girl in Damascus by Amina Arraf, a Syrian-American Muslim woman, who wrote about the uprisings in Syria and her life as a lesbian in Damascus. In June 2011, the world was shocked to learn that Amina had allegedly been abducted by the secret police. But the real surprise was yet to come. Not long after, journalists and activists realized that Amina Arraf was a hoax, invented and impersonated by Thomas “Tom” MacMaster, a forty-year-old straight white American man who studied medieval history in Scotland.
What made McMaster so successful in deceiving the blog’s readers? Specifically, why were educated and politically engaged westerners so susceptible to believing a falsified account of the Syrian revolution? And how did the western need for self-validation as anti-racist, LGBTQ-friendly and anti-imperialist come into play?
Andrew Orr, Professor of Military History and Security Studies at Kansas State University, has delved into these questions in his newly published book, “The Gay Girl in Damascus Hoax.” To shed some light on what we can learn from this incredible story, and how queer theory helps understand history, we invited him for this book talk. The interview was conducted by Rabea Rittgerodt, Senior Acquisitions Editor History at De Gruyter.
Dr. Andrew Orr is Professor of Military History and Security Studies at Kansas State University. His work focuses on the 19th and 20th centuries and explores the boundaries of civilian and military identity.
Link to the book ► https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111057231/html
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#DeGruyter #AndrewOrr #QueerHistory #GayGirlInDamascus
May 30, 2023
32 min
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