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Von A bis Å. (Fast) alles über die Frankfurter Skandinavistik. Ausgabe 4 ; Sommersemester 2022
(2022)
Von A bis Å. (Fast) alles über die Frankfurter Skandinavistik. Ausgabe 3 ; Wintersemester 2021
(2021)
Von A bis Å. (Fast) alles über die Frankfurter Skandinavistik. Ausgabe 2 ; Sommersemester 2021
(2021)
Von A bis Å. (Fast) alles über die Frankfurter Skandinavistik. Ausgabe 1 ; Wintersemester 2020/21
(2020)
ISOE-Newsletter Nr. 1/2023
(2023)
Zukunftsforum Ecornet: Perspektiven der Nachhaltigkeitsforschung +++ UN-Weltwassertag 2023: Wie Kommunen die Wasserwende beschleunigen können +++ Biodiversitätsstudie zeigt Konfliktpotenzial von Landnutzungskonzepten: Faire Landnutzung – wie lokale Interessengruppen bestmöglich von Landschaften profitieren +++ ISOE-Veranstaltung in der Reihe Frankfurter Bürger-Universität: Neue Wege in die Stadt – wie Pendeln nachhaltiger werden kann +++ Neuerscheinung: Vom Leben mit Kunststoffen im „Plastikzeitalter“ +++ Aktuelle Beiträge im ISOE-Blog +++ Termine +++ Publikationen
In the retrospect of almost a decade, the year 2015 seems to offer at least two openings which can help us better understand and localize the "end of theory" narratives that began to take hold sometime around the end of the millennium. Rita Felski's much-discussed and much-maligned 2015 book, "The Limits of Critique", construed the long history of "critique" as largely continuous with the more recent (postwar) idea of "theory," which allowed her to question the presupposed progressivity and utility of the dominant critical-theoretical discourses of late 20th-century North American academia. In the same year, Philipp Felsch's "Der lange Sommer der Theorie" (which was recently published in English as "The Summer of Theory") went so far as to assign specific dates, 1960–1990, and tended to define theory not as a purely academic product, but as a much wider cultural movement. Between the two books, questions of the difference between theory and critique, their specific institutional locus within and beyond academia, became objects of acute concern.
In present-day Germany, research on postwar academia, up through the 1960s and beyond, requires no special justification. But from the North American side, the point of this scholarly activity - including the many new editions and a flood of archive-based publications - is much less obvious. For the most well-established figures of the period, the primary international canonizations were already part of the first waves of the reception, the theoretical tectonics established themselves accordingly, and the theories were established as theories - which are in many quarters presumed to be just as reliable today as they were decades ago. One might say that the international and North American reception of European theory has manifested an overall tendency toward sedimentation, while the dynamic of scholarly research about theory, including the archival unearthing of new sources, tends to complicate and undermine the established corpus of "primary texts."