On Wednesday, 5 March, there will take place a one-day workshop on American society during the presidential election year of 2008. Students are welcome to attend. Details about the workshop can be found by clicking here.
In its February 6th issue, the Leipziger Volkszeitung covered Leipzig’s annual Super Bowl party at Leo’s Brasserie. ASL faculty member Catherine Sharpe attended the event. She provided the crowd with some original Super Bowl T-Shirts, which she brought back to Germany from her last visit to her home state Arizona. To read the article please click here.
On Thursday, Picador Professor John Haskell read from his short story collection “I Am Not Jackson Pollock” in the GRASSI Museum in Leipzig. In a room packed with approximately 80 people, the audience listened to his performance, followed by a German translation read by former ASL student and actor Alexander Munzig.
Picador Guest Professor John Haskell will read from his collection I Am Not Jackson Pollock on Thursday, January 24, 2008, 7pm in the GRASSI Ethnographic Museum. Admission is 2,00 Euro (for students, otherwise 4,00) and covers the exhibition Island People / Inselmenschen of works by the German Photographer Ulrich Mack. The reading will be bilingual in English and German and is co-sponsored by the United States Consulate in Leipzig. Attached, please find the German announcement.
The Chronicle of Higher Education, America’s leading news magazine for higher education and read by close to a million educators in the United States and worldwide, ran a blog-forum on “American Studies Abroad” starting 17 January. American Studies Leipzig provided a contribution outlining the importance of American Studies programs for international students, including American students, and what makes ASL a special program.
Some 65 guests from the greater Leipzig community attended a lively roundtable on the presidential primaries and what they indicate so far as to whom could be the next president of the United States.
The roundtable consisted of Mark Wenig, Consul for Public Affairs at the U.S. Consulate in Leipzig, Fulbright-Leipzig Professor Ben Alpers, and Professor Crister Garrett from the Institute for American Studies.
Städtisches Kaufhaus Room 207 Wednesday, 16 January 2008 5-7 PM
The Presidential Election of 2008 is shaping up to be a highly important moment for the United States and for international affairs. With major developments in the fortunes of candidates for both parties after the caucus in Iowa and the primary in New Hampshire, critical votes are days and weeks ahead (‘Giga-Tuesday’ on 5 February) that could very well determine who will be the two final candidates that will compete to become the next president of the
About fifty prospective students, and quite a few parents, visited ASL during its Open House on 10 January. The ASL Open House was part of the University’s general Open House known as “Tag der Offenen Tür”.