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UID:news105@english.philhist.unibas.ch
DTSTAMP;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20181003T151624
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20180919T181500
SUMMARY:Auslotungen des Menschlichen von der Theodizee zur Technodizee
DESCRIPTION:Einführung zur Ringvorlesung Der moderne Prometheus\\r\\nIna H
 abermann  is Professor of English Literature since the Renaissance at the 
  University of Basel. Her main fields of interest include Shakespeare and 
  the early modern period\, literature and film in the interwar period and 
  the Second World War\, cultural and literary history and theory as well  
 as gender studies\, spatial studies and critical humanisms. She is the  au
 thor of Staging Slander and Gender in Early Modern England (Ashgate 2003)\
 ; and of Myth\, Memory and the Middlebrow: Priestley\, du Maurier and the 
 Symbolic Form of Englishness (Palgrave 2010). Further recent publications 
 include Shakespeare and Space: Theatrical Explorations of the Spatial Para
 digm (Palgrave Macmillan 2016\, ed. with Michelle Witen) and English Topog
 raphies in Literature and Culture  (Brill 2016\, ed. with Daniela Keller).
  Her current research projects  deal with British literary and cultural di
 scourses of Europe and the  literary exploration of otherworldly spaces.
X-ALT-DESC:<br />Einführung zur Ringvorlesung <i>Der moderne Prometheus</i
 >\nIna Habermann  is Professor of English Literature since the Renaissance
  at the  University of Basel. Her main fields of interest include Shakespe
 are and  the early modern period\, literature and film in the interwar per
 iod and  the Second World War\, cultural and literary history and theory a
 s well  as gender studies\, spatial studies and critical humanisms. She is
  the  author of Staging Slander and Gender in Early Modern England (Ashgat
 e 2003)\; and of Myth\, Memory and the Middlebrow: Priestley\, du Maurier 
 and the Symbolic Form of Englishness (Palgrave 2010). Further recent publi
 cations include Shakespeare and Space: Theatrical Explorations of the Spat
 ial Paradigm (Palgrave Macmillan 2016\, ed. with Michelle Witen) and Engli
 sh Topographies in Literature and Culture  (Brill 2016\, ed. with Daniela 
 Keller). Her current research projects  deal with British literary and cul
 tural discourses of Europe and the  literary exploration of otherworldly s
 paces.
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20180919T200000
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