Amir Eshel

Amir Eshel Amir Eshel is Professor of German Studies and Comparative Literature, Chair of Graduate Studies, German Studies; and, since 2005 the Director of The Europe Center at Stanford Universityâ??s Freeman Sopgli Institute for International Studies. His research focuses on the contemporary novel, twentieth century German culture, German-Jewish history and culture, and modern Hebrew literature. He is interested in the literary and cultural imagination as it addresses modernityâ??s traumatic past for its contemporary philosophical, political and ethical implications. Currently, Amir Eshel working on a new project that examines poetry, prose and narratives across media as they raise ethical dilemmas. At Stanford, he has taught courses on memory and history, modern poetry, narrative and ethics, German Romanticism, postwar German literature and culture, the contemporary novel, German Jewish literature, and the modern Hebrew novel.
Currently teaching
MTL 399: Reading for Orals
GERMAN 199: Individual Work
GERMAN 399: Individual Work
COMPLIT 367: Senior Seminar
JEWISHST 347: Senior Seminar
COMPLIT 199: Senior Seminar
JEWISHST 149: Senior Seminar
GERMAN 390: German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka
JEWISHST 349: German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka
COMPLIT 311C: German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka
GERMAN 190: German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka
JEWISHST 147: German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka
COMPLIT 111: German Capstone: Reading Franz Kafka
GERMAN 322: German Literature and Thought from 1900 to the Present: Wrestling with Modernity
GERMAN 222: German Literature and Thought from 1900 to the Present: Wrestling with Modernity
COMPLIT 222A: German Literature and Thought from 1900 to the Present: Wrestling with Modernity
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