Thomas Mann House Events Archive
June 2019
Talk: Past Deeds, Political Horizons — Thomas Mann and Post-War Germany
Los Angeles

When Thomas Mann embarked on a journey to his former homeland in 1949, Germany seemed intent on drawing a closing line under the legal reconditioning of crimes committed during the Nazi regime. With support from all political parties, the West German Parliament passed a general amnesty favoring tens of thousands of Nazi perpetrators whose crimes were deemed minor. That same year, the East Germany’s provisional parliament enacted a law waiving punishment of former members of the Nazi Party and of the Wehrmacht.
Despite the country's outward attempts to turn over a new leaf, Thomas Mann regarded denazification in Germany as a farce. Four years after the end of the war, he was deeply pessimistic: „Everything that, for a moment, (…) felt a need to hide in 1945 is once again boldly rearing its head.“ At the same time, most Germans were willing to vote for democratic parties. The chance to establish a free constitutional order, however, was limited to the West.
Renowned historian Norbert Frei will focus on Thomas Mann’s literary work in the context of Germany’s social psychology in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Moderation: David Kim (UCLA).
Norbert Frei is Chair for Modern History at the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena and the director of the Jena Center 20th Century History. Professor Frei obtained his doctoral degree from the University of Munich in 1979 and was, among others, Kennedy Fellow at Harvard University (1985/86), a Member of Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (2008/09) and Theodor Heuss Professor at the New School for Social Research in New York (2010/11). Currently, Norbert Frei is Gerda Henkel Visiting Professor at Stanford University. Most recently, he is co-author of „Zur rechten Zeit. Wider die Rückkehr des Nationalismus“ (At the right time. Against the return of nationalism, Ullstein Berlin 2019).
David D. Kim is Associate Professor of German at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is also affiliated with the UCLA International Institute. His scholarly interests range from the age of Enlightenment to the present day with emphases on postcolonial and translation studies, digital humanities, international human rights, and political and cultural theories.
Location
Thomas Mann House
1550 San Remo Drive
Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
By invitation only.
#LNDI2019: Armen Avanessian & Enemies #58: Infrastructure Europe
Berlin

The Federal Foreign Office and its partners invite you to the fourth "Long Night of Ideas" on June 6, 2019. This year's Long Night of Ideas will be focusing on Europe under the heading of "Idea and Ideal - Europe". The idea of Europe will be illuminated in many ways. At prominent locations in Berlin's cultural landscape, from the Volksbühne to the Barenboim Said Akademie to the Silent Green Quartier in Wedding, we present the range of foreign cultural and educational policy. You can find the complete program at menschenbewegen.jetzt/LNDI2019.

VATMH presents Armen Avanessian & Enemies #58: Infrastructure Europe w/ Metahaven
In Europe, populist voices predict bank crises, national debt crises, economic crises, and refugee crises and are accompanied by the rampant circulation of media images and reductionist symbolism – promising a future based on a national past that probably never existed. What these iconographic reductions and origin fantasies fail to recognize is that Europe is comprised of a complex infrastructure, which penetrates and enables life down to the smallest everyday aspects. Together with the Rotterdam based design collective Metahaven, Thomas Mann Fellow Armen Avanessian aims to answer the following questions: How can Europe’s identity be imagined outside classical symbols such as flags, hymns or monuments? Which kinds of future perspectives for Europe could this vision imply?
Location
Roter Salon in der Volksbühne, Linienstraße 227, 10178 Berlin
Free Admission
R.s.v.p. via infoberlin@vatmh.org.
An event of the Lange Nacht der Ideen 2019. Presented by VATMH in cooperation with the Volksbühne Berlin and Arch +
