Veronika Fuechtner Talk in Berlin: The Magician's Mother: A Story of Coffee, Race, and German Culture

Veronika Fuechtner gave a talk last February 14 at the Berlin Academy, moderated by the novelist Tanja Dückers, a former Max Kade Visiting Professor at Dartmouth. The guest list included other former Kade and Harris Professorship guests, including Christoph Magnusson, Maxie Obexer & Veronika Springmann, Christopher Klöble, Ute Frevert. Approximately 150 people were in attendance.
 
Veronika Fuechtner - The Magician's Mother: A Story of Coffee, Race, and German Culture

Thomas Mann so shaped the idea of "Germanness" in the twentieth century that, even in exile, he would claim that German culture was wherever he was. Yet this iconic German writer had a Brazilian mother—Julia Mann (1851-1923), née da Silva Bruhns—whose traumatic experiences of immigration profoundly influenced her son's life and writing. In this talk, Veronika Fuechtner argues that this story radically alters the way we read not only Mann's writing but also his place within German literature, ultimately undermining the notion of canonical German literature and its unspoken assumption of racial and cultural homogeneity.

 
More information about the talk can be found at the following link: