Herrmann, Sebastian M.
Sebastian M. Herrmann is an American studies scholar at Leipzig University, Germany. His work is focused on the poetics of ('post-truth') politics, on popular culture, and on symbolic forms. His most recent monograph, currently forthcoming, focuses on the interdependence of data and literature in ninetheenth-century US culture.
Kanzler, Katja
Katja Kanzler is a professor of American literature at Universität Leipzig, Germany. Her work is focused on the intersectionalities of 'race,' class, and gender in US-American literature and popular culture, on genres of popular culture past and present, and on the dynamics of narrativity and textuality in different genres and media.
Schubert, Stefan
Stefan Schubert researches and teaches at the Institute for American Studies at Universität Leipzig, Germany. His main interests include US popular culture, (post-)postmodernism, cultural politics, 19th-century literature, and questions of textuality and narrativity. His postdoctoral research project focuses on the emergence of privilege in late nineteenth-century US literature and culture.
Sebastian M. Herrmann, based at the Institute of American Studies Leipzig, has received several grants to pursue the learning and teaching innovation project SHRIMP and other projects. He has recently been awarded a grant by the VolkswagenStiftung to work on the post-narrative quality of contemporary populism.
Katja Kanzler is a professor of American literature at Universität Leipzig, Germany. Her work is focused on the intersectionalities of 'race,' class, and gender in US-American literature and popular culture, on genres of popular culture past and present, and on the dynamics of narrativity and textuality in different genres and media.
Stefan Schubert researches and teaches at the Institute for American Studies at Universität Leipzig, Germany. His main interests include US popular culture, (post-)postmodernism, cultural politics, 19th-century literature, and questions of textuality and narrativity. His postdoctoral research project focuses on the emergence of privilege in late nineteenth-century US literature and culture.