Thomas Mann House Events Archive

December 2018

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Lecture: The Erosion of Western Democracies and How to Turn the Tide

Berlin

The Erosion of Western Democracies and How to Turn the Tide.

An evening with Laura-Kristine Krause (Direktor, More in Common) and Daniel Ziblatt (Eaton Professor of the Science, Harvard University) moderated by  Sudha David-Wilp (Senior Transatlantic Fellow and Deputy Director Berlin Office, The German Marshall Fund of the United States)

The German Marshall Fund of the United States, the Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V., and the Robert Bosch Stiftung are pleased to invite you to the opening event of their newly launched lecture series on “The Backlash against Liberal Democracy”.We are delighted to have Daniel Ziblatt, Eaton Professor of the Science of Government at Harvard University, provide his analysis on how democracies die and Laura-Kristine Krause, director of More in Common Germany, contribute her ideas on protecting democratic societies from the threats of populism, polarization, and social division. Liberal norms, values, and democratic institutions are increasingly under pressure. Polarization and renationalization characterize the political atmosphere on both sides of the Atlantic. Both Europe and the United States have seen the election of leaders playing to an often populist agenda and bringing with them a new flavor of political discourse. With the narrative of “Us vs. Them” increasingly extended to the roles of judiciaries and parliaments in public debate, how can societies halt the erosion of democracy and its fundamental institutions? What mechanisms and safeguards can be deployed to ensure democracies do not suffer?

Henry Alt-Haaker

Head of International Relations Programs & Liaison Work at the Berlin Representative Office Robert Bosch Stiftung


Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff

Vice President and Director Berlin Office, The German Marshall Fund of the United States


Heike Catherina Mertens

Executive Director, Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e.V.

 

The series “The Backlash Against Liberal Democracy” brings together influential voices from Europe and the United States, and seeks to shed light on different aspects of the challenges that liberal democracies face.


Laura-Kristine Krause is the Germany Director of More in Common, a new international initiative set up in 2017 to build communities and societies that are stronger, more united and more resilient to the increasing threats of polarization and social division. More in Common brings together attitudinal research, narrative work, and connecting people across divides and has teams in the UK, France, and the US. Laura-Kristine Krause previously headed the Future of Democracy program at the Berlin-based think tank Das Progressive Zentrum and worked on the election campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Martin Schulz in the European Parliament elections. She is also the co-chairwoman of D64 – Center for Digital Progress, and consults for the state governments of Rhineland-Palatine and Brandenburg at the intersection of digitalization and democracy. She has published on societal unity, institutional reform, digital democracy, and women in politics and was selected as one of the 40 under 40 of German society and science in 2017 and 2018. She holds a master’s degree in Political Science from Freie Universität Berlin and was a Fulbright Fellow at the University of Washington.

Daniel Ziblatt
is Eaton Professor of the Science of Government at Harvard University where he is also a resident faculty associate of the Minda de Gunzburg Cener for European Studies and Harvard’s Weatherhead Center for International Affairs. His research focuses on democratization, democratic breakdown, political parties, state-building, and historical political economy, with an emphasis on Europe from the nineteenth century to the present. His three books include How Democracies Die (co-authored with Steve Levitsky), which is being translated into fifteen languages. Ziblatt is also the author of Conservative Parties and the Birth of Democracy, which won the American Political Science Association’s 2018 Woodrow Wilson Prize for the best book in government and international relations as well as three other prizes including the American Sociological Association’s 2018 Barrington Moore Book Prize.  His first book was Structuring the State: The Formation of Italy and Germany and the Puzzle of Federalism. Ziblatt co-chairs (with Steve Levitsky) a new Challenges to Democracy Research Cluster at Harvard's Weatherhead Center. He also directs a research program at Harvard's Institute of Quantitative Social Science (“Politics Through Time”) and has served as interim director of Harvard’s de Gunzburg Center for European Studies. He has been a visiting fellow at European and American universities, including the European University Institute (Florence, Italy), Sciences Po (Paris), as well as several German universities, including most recently in the Department of History (State Archive of Bavaria and Institute of Bavarian History) at the Ludwigs Maximilian University (Munich, Germany)

Friday, December 14, 2018

Lecture: Surveying the Brain - picoampere, nanovolt, micrometer - that's all it takes!

Los Angeles

Lecture: Surveying the brain - picoampere, nanovolt, micrometer - that's all it takes!

When billions of tiny nerve cells in our brains communicate with each other, we are electrified. Our neurons, usually only a few thousandths of a millimeter in size, interact by emitting electrical signals. If disturbances occur during this stimulating communication, an EEG can make them visible.
 
In addition to the predominantly medicinal treatment, deep brain stimulation opens up new avenues for neurological and psychiatric diseases: high-frequency voltages continuously stimulate core areas of the brain, leading to a reduction in symptoms.
Since the 1980s, around 85,000 people worldwide - mainly Parkinson's and epilepsy patients - have been treated successfully in this way. In addition, this method offers new approaches in cases of therapy-resistant depression.
In his lecture, Yiannos Manoli presents state-of-the-art research and the far-reaching possibilities of deep brain stimulation, also colloquially referred to as the "brain pacemaker". Manoli holds the Fritz-Hüttinger-Chair of Microelectronics at the University of Freiburg and is head of the Hahn-Schickard Institute.
He is one of the first Fellows at the Thomas Mann House in Pacific Palisades, inaugurated in the summer of 2018.

Location

Thomas Mann House, 1550 N San Remo Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272

(by invitation only)

Monday, December 17, 2018

Panel Discussion: The Doctor Faustus Dossier

Los Angeles

On December 17, the Thomas Mann House is hosting a panel discussion with E. Randol Schoenberg and Marjorie Perloff on the ties between Arnold Schoenberg and Thomas Mann, most famously the Doctor Faustus dispute. The panel will be moderated by Marc Katz (Scripps College, Claremont).

Thomas Mann and Arnold Schoenberg, two of the most important figures of literature and music in their day, were neighbors in Pacific Palisades from 1941 to 1951. Thomas Mann had won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1929 for his essays and novels, among them Buddenbrooks and Magic Mountain. By 1926, Schoenberg was teaching the master class in composition at the Prussian Academy of the Arts in Berlin. Each in their own métier, Schoenberg and Mann were at the pinnacle of German culture. However, both of them were ostracized shortly after by the Nazi regime: Schoenberg’s music was banned, Mann’s books were burned. Both of them fled from Germany in 1933. During their time in Los Angeles they met occasionally at social gatherings and hosted one another a couple of times. However, their respectful relations suffered severely with the publication of Mann’s Doctor Faustus. The work featured Schoenberg’s philosophy and particularly his twelve-tone technique prominently, but made no reference to Schoenberg or his oeuvre. A heated dispute ensued between the two great minds.

Randol Schoenberg, the grandson of Arnold Schoenberg, has edited The Doctor Faustus Dossier: Arnold Schoenberg, Thomas Mann, and their Contemporaries, 1930-1951, a complete edition of the correspondence between Schoenberg and Mann.

Marjorie Perloff, herself part of the émigré community in Pacific Palisades, is a scholar and critic who has written extensively on 20th and 21st century poetry and poetics.

Marc Katz, who will be moderating the event, is Associate Professor of German and the Chair of the Department of German Studies at Scripps.


Location

Thomas Mann House, 1550 N San Remo Drive, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272

(by invitation only)

An event in cooperation with the Wende Museum.