- Mission
- Acknowledging Bard's Origins
- History of Bard
- Learning at Bard
- Admission
- Academic Calendar
- Division of the Arts
- Division of Languages and Literature
- Division of Science, Mathematics, and Computing
- Division of Social Studies
- Interdivisional Programs and Concentrations
- Interdivisional Overview
- Africana Studies
- American and Indigenous Studies
- Asian Studies
- Classical Studies
- Data Analytics
- Environmental Studies
- Experimental Humanities
- French Studies
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- German Studies
- Global and International Studies
- Global Public Health
- Human Rights
- Irish and Celtic Studies
- Italian Studies
- Jewish Studies
- Latin American and Iberian Studies
- Medieval Studies
- Middle Eastern Studies
- Mind, Brain, and Behavior
- Russian and Eurasian Studies
- Science, Technology, and Society
- Spanish Studies
- Theology
- Victorian Studies
- Multidisciplinary Studies
- Interdisciplinary Curricular Initiatives
- The Bard Conservatory of Music
- Bard Abroad
- Additional Study Opportunities and Affiliated Institutes
- Civic Engagement
- Open Society University Network
- Campus Life and Facilities
- Graduate Programs
- Educational Outreach
- Levy Economics Institute of Bard College
- The Bard Center
- Finances
- Scholarships, Awards, and Prizes
- Faculty
- Honorary Degrees and Bard College Awards
- Boards and Administration of Bard College
- Bard College Contact Information
- Bard Campus Map and Travel Directions
Bard College Catalogue 2023-24
German Studies
Faculty
Thomas Wild (director), Thomas Bartscherer, Katherine M. Boivin, Leon Botstein, Garry L. Hagberg, Stephanie Kufner, Peter Laki, Gregory B. Moynahan, Rufus Müller, Jana Schmidt, Ruth Zisman
Overview
The German Studies Program encompasses the language, literature, culture, history, philosophy, art, and music of the German-speaking countries. The cultural and historical expressions of German can best be understood by interdisciplinary study and by situating German, Austrian, and Swiss cultures within the larger European and global contexts. In pursuing work in German Studies, students are expected to take a range of courses in the program, focusing on literature, history, philosophy, and politics but also taking advantage of related courses in art history and visual culture, music, theater, and film. German Studies can be pursued as a stand-alone major; designing a joint major with another discipline is encouraged and fully supported.
Requirements
A student moderates into German Studies with a focus in German literatures and cultures. Joint majors moderate separately into German Studies and the related discipline (philosophy, music, economics, etc.) or they may integrate German Studies and another field of inquiry into one Moderation. Before Moderation, potential majors are required to participate in the annual German intensive program, a semester of intensive language study at Bard in the fall followed by a month’s study in January at Bard College Berlin; a survey course in German literature; and at least one semester of German or European history, thought, or culture (including philosophy, music, art history, etc.). After Moderation, the student is required to take at least one German literature course in German per semester until graduation and write a Senior Project in the senior year. The program highly recommends that moderated students study abroad for a semester, ideally in the spring of the junior year. Bard offers an exchange program with Humboldt University in Berlin and several study abroad options with Bard College Berlin (see “Bard Abroad” in this catalogue).
Recent Senior Projects in German Studies
- “Confinement and Liberation: Exploring Ambiguity in Selected Poems by Paul Celan”
- “Threads of Memory: Remembrance and Reflection in the Work of Ilse Aichinger”
- “Untuning Momentums of Techno between Detroit and Berlin”