Programme
Programme
Programme
Thursday, 16 May 2019
15:00-15:30 | Bianca Pick and Robert Forkel: Introduction |
15:30-16:30 | Bianca Pick: Irreconcilability in dialogue. On 'unresolvable knots', 'resentful victims' and irreconcilable perspectives |
16:30-17:00 | Coffee break |
17:00-18:00 | Francesco Ferrari: Vladimir Jankélévitch's "Diseases of Temporality" and Their Impact on Reconciliatory Processes |
18:00-19:00 | Peter Banki: Thinking in the Company of Silences and Pain: Reconciliation and the Irreconcilable in Wiesenthal and Jankélévitch |
| 20:00 | Dinner together at Caldero (directions) |
Friday, 17 May 2019
08:30-09:30 | Thomas Alkemeyer: The Other (in) the Order. A critical intervention in the field of contemporary sociology of practice |
09:30-10:30 | Robert Forkel: Cultivated dissent. Literary functional potentials for the formation and stabilisation of memory-cultural agonisms |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee break |
11:00-12:00 | Dennis Bock: Literary disruption. Liana Millu's stories "The smoke over Birkenau" |
12:00-13:00 | Anna-Katharina Gisbertz: Deconstruction instead of reconciliation in Lisa Fittko's prose |
13:00-14:00 | Lunch break |
14:00-15:00 | Dennis Marten: Self-emergence in the strangeness of the text. Identity formation in Paul Ricoeur and Paul Celan |
15:00-16:00 | Saskia Fischer: The limits of reconciliation in Nelly Sachs' "Eli - A Mystery Play about the Suffering of Israel" (1951) |
16:00-16:30 | Coffee break |
16:30-17:30 | Luisa Banki: The art of revenge. Irreconcilability as a literary topos of contemporary German-Jewish literature |
17:30-18:30 | Sebastian Schirrmeister: Revenge Act. Theatrical stagings of Jewish retribution (fantasies) |
18:30-19:30 | Katharina von Kellenbach: "Everything will never be good again". Max Czollek and the disintegration |
20:00 | Dinner together at the Mephisto (directions) |
Saturday, 18 May 2019
08:30-09:30 | Stephan Grätzel: Narrative ethics in Thomas Mann's novel "Joseph and his Brothers" as a contribution to reconciliation after 1945 |
09:30-10:30 | Birgit M. Körner: 'No collective guilt, but a collective shame' - Ephraim Kishon's 'Israeli humour' as an ambivalent offer of reconciliation in German post-war discourse |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee break |
11:00-12:00 | Nina Peter: Fictional perpetrator perspectives as a challenge for the reconciliation discourse |
12:00-12:30 | Final discussion |