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The Practice of History

A Kathleen Canning Frame of Mind
Friday, December 15, 2017
10:00 AM-6:00 PM
1014 Tisch Hall Map
Kathleen Canning’s work has transformed the way we do history and her indefatigable spirit has inspired scholars and students here at the University of Michigan and beyond. This symposium will bring together scholars whose work has been inspired by her writings and teaching and students whose careers she supported and shaped, with the purpose of marking her transition from the University of Michigan to Rice University, where she will serve as Dean of Humanities.

The Practice of History will feature a keynote lecture in Canning’s honor by Tracie Matysik (University of Texas, Austin) and bring together leading scholars, colleagues, and former students of Canning’s to reflect on her numerous contributions in four panels. In a first session, colleagues from Michigan and elsewhere will consider how Canning’s work has shaped the field of German History. A second session on Citizenship and Gender will engage with her most important historical and theoretical arguments to illustrate how they continue to transform historical understanding of categories such as gender, citizenship, experience, practice and participation. The third session, features some of Canning’s more recent former students who will comment on the key role her work and mentorship have played in their education, their development as scholars, and their current careers. The last session “Kathleen and the World” brings together scholars who work in non-European fields to reflect on the breadth and reach of Canning’s influence.

Besides celebrating the scholarship and educational vision of Kathleen Canning, The Practice of History also seeks to remind us all of the extraordinary citizen, colleague, mentor. and friend she has been to her Michigan students and colleagues as well as to scholars, thinkers, and activists elsewhere. Her work has never been purely abstract. Her labor has never been only theoretical. Her scholarship is marked most by its heartfelt connections to actual people and places, both in the now and in the past and driven by her deep commitment to activism, practice, empowerment, and enjoyment.

Thursday, December 14

Kathleen Canning and German History, 2:00 pm
Rita Chin (University of Michigan)
David Crew (University of Texas, Austin)
Atina Grossmann (Cooper Union)
Elizabeth Otto (SUNY Buffalo)
Chair: Warren Rosenblum (Webster University)

Keynote Lecture, 4:00 pm
Tracie Matysik (University of Texas, Austin)

Friday, December 15

Kathleen Canning, Citizenship, and Gender, 10:00 am
Kerstin Barndt (University of Michigan)
Kathy Bench (Baruch College, CUNY)
Marti Lybeck (University of Wisconsin, La Crosse)
Scott Spector (University of Michigan)
Chair: Josh Cole (University of Michigan)

Kathleen Canning as a Teacher and Mentor, 2:00 pm
Johannes von Moltke (University of Michigan)
Alice Goff (University of Chicago)
Ian McNeely (University of Oregon)
Ari Sammartino (Oberlin College)
Alice Weinreb (Loyola University Chicago)
Chair: Brian Porter-Szucs (University of Michigan)

Kathleen Canning and the World, 4:15 pm
Penny von Eschen (Cornell University)
Helmut Puff (University of Michigan)
Lora Wildenthal (Rice University)
Anne Berg (University of Michigan
Chair: Farina Mir (University of Michigan)
Building: Tisch Hall
Event Type: Conference / Symposium
Tags: European, German, History, Women's Studies
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Department of History, The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Institute for Research on Women and Gender, Comparative Literature, Rackham Graduate School, Center for European Studies, Women's and Gender Studies Department, Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, Department of Sociology, Germanic Languages & Literatures
Upcoming Dates:
Friday, December 15, 2017 10:00 AM-6:00 PM  (Last)