Between World Wars: Germany’s Roaring Twenties

Barbara Kosta
Spring 2018
MONDAYS |  
1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
January 29, February 5, 12, 19, 26, 2018
Course Format: Hybrid
Location: Main Campus
Tuition: $95

Professor Kosta repeats her popular course from 2015 with a few variations:

Germany’s Weimar Republic (1919-1933) rose out of the ashes of World War I to become both an immensely creative and fraught period of the twentieth century. The exciting capital Berlin, a laboratory of modernity, was the center of radical experimentation in the visual and performing arts, in mass entertainment and theater, and in literature and architecture. While the cultural stage was vibrant and intoxicating, the shell shock of World War I, the demands of the Versailles Treaty, economic instability, social upheaval, and political turmoil also haunted the celebrated roaring twenties. To explore the rich landscape of the 1920s, this seminar examines the avant-garde movements Expressionism and Dada along with the vast social changes and technological developments exemplified in Lang’s film Metropolis and Brecht’s theater. Still relevant today, this period continues to fascinate us.

The movie The Blue Angel will be screened in the classroom on February 12, 2018.

Required Reading

Brecht, Bertold. A Man’s A Man: Early Plays by Bertolt Brecht. Ed. Eric Bentley. Grove Press, New York. Paperback. 2007. ISBN-13: 9780802131591.

Recommended Reading

The Weimar Republic Sourcebook. Edited by Anton Kaes, Martin Jay and Edward Dimendberg. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994. ISBN-13: 978-0520067752.

Meet Your Instructor

Professor; Head, Department of German Studies

BARBARA KOSTA is Professor and Head of the Department of German Studies. Her teaching and research interests focus on autobiographical writing in German and Austrian literature, German cinema, and the visual culture of the Weimar Republic. In addition to multiple articles, book chapters, and edited books, her publications include Recasting Autobiography: Women’s Counterfictions in Contemporary German Literature and Film and Willing Seduction: The Blue Angel, Marlene Dietrich, Mass Culture. Kosta received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.

Location

POETRY CENTER
Dorothy Rubel Room
1508 E Helen
Tucson, AZ 85721
United States

Located on the SE corner of Helen Street and Vine Avenue, one block north of Speedway and three blocks west of Campbell Ave.

Street map image of Poetry Center

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