Germanic Languages & Literatures
Home / German Studies / Faculty / Scott Spector
Divider Image
Divider Image
Current Research Emeriti Faculty Focus Articles Divider Image
Vanessa Agnew Frederick Amrine Kerstin Barndt Ton Broos Kathleen Canning Geoff Eley Johanna Eriksson Kalli Federhofer Andreas Gailus Pascal Grosse Julia Hell Kader Konuk Andrei Markovits Peter McIsaac Andrew Mills Helmut Puff Robin Queen Hartmut Rastalsky Scott Spector George Steinmetz Janet VanValkenburg Johannes von Moltke Silke-Maria Weineck
Spacer
go to printer friendly version  Printer Version

Scott Spector
Professor

U of M Affiliation(s)
History, Judaic Studies, Women’s Studies and CREES

Fields of Study
Modern Central European Cultural History, German-Jewish Identity and Culture, History of Sexuality, Habsburg History, Modernism

About Scott Spector

Scott Spector continues his studies in the cultural history of modern Central Europe. His varied research and teaching interests revolve around problems of the relations between ideology and culture, approached from an interdisciplinary perspective. In particular his interests have included: German-speaking Jewish writers and thinkers, sexuality and culture, nationalism, the politics of historiography, and the dialogue between film and historical representation. His two current book projects include a study of the creation of marginal figures (homosexuals, eroticized women, Jewish ritual murderers) in the scientific and sensational culture of fin-de-siècle Vienna and Berlin, and a collection of essays on German-Jewish subjectivity and its histories.



Awards
John Rich Professor (Faculty Fellowship), Institute for the Humanities, U-M [2007-08]
Michigan Humanities Fellowship, Office of the Vice President for Research, U-M [2006]
Fellowship in International Studies, John W. Kluge Center, Library of Congress, Washington, DC, [2002]

Selected Publications

Selected Articles:

  • "Where Personal Fate Turns to Public Affair: Homosexual Scandal and Social Order in Vienna, 1900-1910,"Austrian History Yearbook 38 (2007), pp. 15-24.
  • "Modernism Without Jews: A Counter-Historical Argument," Modernism/modernity Vol. 13, No. 4 (November 2006), pp. 615-633. muse.jhu.edu/journals/modernism-modernity/v013/13.4spector.html
  • "Forget Assimilation: Introducing Subjectivity to German-Jewish History," Jewish History vol. 20, nos. 3/4 (December 2006), pp. 349-61; also in: Zvi Gitelman, ed., Religion or Ethnicity? Jewish Identities in Evolution (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2009), 90-103. www.springerlink.com/content/83n5164u60k16536/
  • "Hybridity and the Habsburg Jews," Spaces of Identity, vol. 6, no. 1 (April 2006), pp. 9-18 www.yorku.ca/soi/_Vol_6_1/_HTML/Spector.html
  • "Edith Stein's Passing Gestures: Intimate Histories, Empathic Portraits," New German Critique 75 (Fall, 1998), pp. 28-56, repr. Joyce Avrech Berkman, ed., Contemplating Edith Stein (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 2006), pp. 93-121.

 




Spacer

 

 

 
 

College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Homepage
Designed by LSA Development, Marketing & Communications

 

 
Germanic Home Germanic Home University of Michigan Homepage Germanic Home