Scott Denham
Professor of German
Director, Center for Interdisciplinary Studies
Department of German & Russian 
Davidson
College 
Davidson
, NC 28035-6932
scdenham @ davidson.edu
Phone: 704.894.2855 
Fax: 704.894.2720
Courier Address
(UPS, FedEx, etc.)
Scott Denham
Dept of German & Russian
209 Ridge Road
Davidson College
Davidson, NC 28036
Office: Carolina Inn 100
Current office hours and schedule here.

Home:
P.O. Box 1922   (
map
111 Peter's Place 
Davidson, NC
28036 
704.892.4641

Walking the dogs near Randersacker, Unterfranken.

I studied at the University of Chicago (BA, honors in German), the Philipps-Universität Marburg, the Freie Universität Berlin, and Harvard University (PhD 1990), working there primarily in German, but also in comparative literature and history. I have written and spoken on war fiction, Ernst Jünger, Kafka, reception studies, interdisciplinarity and cultural studies, Modernism and narrative, the Holocaust, Walter Gropius and the Bauhaus, and W.G. Sebald. My teaching interests include German studies broadly, modernism and narrative theory, the Holocaust and its representation, second-language and writing pedagogy, Susan Sontag, Günter Grass, Christa Wolf, postwar German film, German politics and culture, and questions of identity, loss, and memory in the central European context. I have recently also worked on war stories by Jens Rehn and Hans Erich Nossack. I also teach in Davidson's Humanities courses. I am continuing work on Sebald, on Ernst Jünger's nationalist essays from the 1920s, on an essay on Friedrich Torberg's politics of emigration, and I have a new book project on ideas and representations of German suffering. An even longer-term book project on Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus, and Modernism lays claim to much space on my bookshelves and in my files. I received Davidson's Hunter-Hamilton Love of Teaching Award in 2002 and have been the recipient of many grants and fellowships as well. I take an active interest in matters of student life at Davidson. I have directed the department's study abroad program in Würzburg three times (1992-93, 1996-97, 2003-2004). As Director of the Center for Interdisciplinary Studies at Davidson I work closely with students practicing interdisciplinary research. I also currently chair the College's Graduate Fellowships Committee. Beyond the classroom and the library I spend time in the fields and woods in Ost-Westfalen, North Carolina and Colorado, on the water hoping for wind, and with my wife Cathy (a teacher), and daughters Evelyn and Beatrice (and the dogs).


Curriculum vitae Würzburg (JYA)

Sebald Symposium


Current courses 2006-07

Previous Courses (selected)

2005-2006Courses

Fall
German 431 Seminar: Kafka
Independent studies
CIS 495: Thesis
Spring
German 201: Intermediate German
German 291: Contemporary Germany
Independent Studies
CIS 496: Thesis

War Stories
Cultures & Civilizations
Contemporary Germany
Intermediate German
Postwar Germany
The Novel of Education
Kafka and the Modern Novel
Die Weimarer Moderne
Deutscher Geist
Composition & Conversation
The Holocaust

Humanities 251 (Spring) [notes]
German 101 sections A & B (Fall)
German 499: Sr. Colloq.(Spring)
The German Press (ind.st. Fall)
German Colonialism (ind.st. Fall)
CIS 495 (Fall)
CIS 496 (Spring)


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