MKI News and Upcoming Events

2008 Events

Click on item for further information:

Three-part German-American Heritage Lecture Series (Oct. 15, Nov. 12, and Nov. 19)

MKI 25th Anniversary Event, October 23, 2008 in Madison, Wisconsin

F. W. Heine and the World of Cyclorama Paintings, November 1, 2008 in West Bend, Wisconsin

MKI International Conference, April 1-3, 2009 in Madison, Wisconsin

News

 


German-American Heritage Lecture Series
(Oct. 15, Nov. 12, and Nov. 19)

Celebrate the 25th anniversary of the UW's Max Kade Institute
by participating in this free, three-part lecture series.

These free lectures are open to all,
but registration is requested.
Click here for further details.

 


Save the date!
MKI 25th Anniversary Event
6:30 p.m., Thursday October 23, 2008
at Tripp Commons in Madison, Wisconsin

"The Lusitania Effect:
German Propaganda and German-American Identity in World War I"
Guest speaker: Prof. Frank Trommler,
Professor Emeritus of German,
University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia

Reception to follow

For an abstract of Prof. Trommler's lecture, please click here

Sponsored by the Max Kade Institute, Friends of the MKI, the UW-Madison German Department, and Center for German and European Studies.

 


F. W. Heine and the World of Cyclorama Paintings
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Museum of Wisconsin Art, West Bend

Discover the amazing history of 19th- and early 20th-century Panorama Painting in Milwaukee,
the United States, and Europe as scholars from the United States and Germany discuss the incredible stories of this once-celebrated medium. The Symposium will reveal recent discoveries
in Milwaukee that will redefine what is known about the history of Panorama Painting.

The morning session will illuminate the grand history of the Panorama, both in Europe and America. The afternoon session will focus on the Friedrich Wilhelm Heine Diaries Project
and Milwaukee's German-American influences.

F.W. Heine was an accomplished German artist when he was recruited by the
American Panorama Company of Milwaukee. He was the principal artist for
some of the most famous panoramas of the time, later becoming co-owner of his own
panorama company, as well as owner of the Heine Art School in Milwaukee.

$25 nonmembers, $20 for members of
MWA, MCHS or MKI & students
Includes all lectures, lunch & reception

Open to the public, registration required.
Click Here for Registration Information

 

Save the dates!
MKI International Conference
April 1-3, 2009

"Excursions in German-American Studies:
Celebrating 25 Years at the Max Kade Institute, UW-Madison"

Details to follow soon!

 
NEWS

Announcing "German WordsAmerican Voices"
CD and Booklet!

Featuring 12 audio clips of speakers of German from across the United States
from the MKI's North American German Dialect Archive
Click HERE for more information

Visit our blog!

(Nearly) Everyone's an Immigrant:
Immigration Studies, German-American Style


 

New MKI Publication

Other Witnesses: An Anthology of the German Americans, 1850-1914
Edited and with introductory essays by Cora Lee Kluge

Cover of Wisconsin German Land and Life

The “other witnesses” represented in this volume are foreign-born immigrant authors who wrote in German of their experiences and insights. Their work provides today's readers with a unique perspective and a new understanding of America's growth and development between 1850 and the First World War. The collection includes poems, plays, prose fiction, reports, and memoirs by Christian Essellen, Reinhold Solger, Mathilde Franziska Anneke, Theodor Kirchhoff, Udo Brachvogel, Robert Reitzel, Julius Gugler, Lotta L. Leser, Fernande Richter, and others. Some of the works presented have never yet appeared in book form, and others are published here for the first time. Many have remained unknown, and all are difficult to locate. Introductory essays to each chapter provide biographical information, elucidate the cultural context, and point the way for further research.   

Introductions to the authors and their works are in English, while the original texts are in German.

How to order

 

New MKI Publication

Wisconsin German Land and Life

Cover of Wisconsin German Land and Life

The essays in this volume focus is on migrants from farming communities along the Rhine who relocated to Wisconsin in the nineteenth century: from the Westerwald to Reeseville; from the Cologne area to Cross Plains; from the Eifel to the so-called Holyland in Fond du Lac and Calumet counties; and from Rhine Hesse to Washington and Sheboygan counties. The authors examine the migrants' relationship to the land, utilizing official records on both sides of the Atlantic, such as census and family records, land registers, plat maps, and land surveys. The broad picture includes the migrants' situation in their original home, the migration process itself, and their experience in Wisconsin.

How to order

 

German 278, lecture 2
Spring Semester (Classes run Jan. 22– May 11, 2007)

The German Immigration Experience
Professor Cora Lee Kluge, MWF 11:00

This course offers a survey of the immigration experience of Europeans from German-speaking lands. Who were they and why did they come to America?
Why did Wisconsin become a particularly strong area of German settlement?
What kind of life and what problems and disappointments
did German immigrants encounter?
Historical, sociological, linguistic, and cultural aspects will be considered,
in order both to gain insight into the greatest movement of peoples in modern times
and to view the development of the United States from a unique perspective. 

Open to freshmen. No German required.
Counts as a humanities course and, for German majors, as one of the required cognate courses. Lecture, readings, and discussion. Exams, one paper, and a final.

Supplemental course images.

Contact Prof. Kluge at clnollen@wisc.edu

 

Frank Zeidler, 1912–2006

With sadness the Max Kade Institute notes the passing last Friday of Hon. Frank P. Zeidler, the former mayor of Milwaukee. Frank and his wife Agnes were longtime Friends of the MKI and did much to promote interest in the German heritage of Milwaukee and the region. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ran a lengthy memorial article on Frank and his legacy: http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=459264.

The staff and Friends of the MKI extend their heartfelt condolences to Mrs. Zeidler, their children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

 

MKI launches new Web site on German-American dialects

The Max Kade Institute is pleased to invite you to visit a new Web site devoted
to German dialects spoken in the United States, part of the American Languages project funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

Go to http://csumc.wisc.edu/AmericanLanguages, click on "German dialects,"
and explore the site. We also invite you to complete a brief user survey,
which is linked under "Evaluation" at the upper right. Although the survey questions are formulated in English, you may answer in German or English.
This survey is important to us in making the site as user-friendly as possible.

 

Visit our new
"How German Is American?" Web site:
http://mki.wisc.edu/HGIA/index.htm

The “How German Is American?” site explores the many ways in which influences deriving from German-speaking Europe may still be seen flowing in the mainstream and tributaries of culture across the American landscape.
Here we consider how many of these themes help us understand the transatlantic ties that have bound the U.S. and Germany together throughout the years.

A feedback form is available to allow you to tell us more about the ways the concepts of "Germanness" and "Americanness" relate to themes of migration, cultural contact, and identity. We will compile responses and provide more information on the Web site in the future.

 

2006 MKI Conference

“The German Language and Immigration in International Perspective.”

 

New genealogy resource of note

Geogen—Distribution of German Surnames

Geogen stands for "geographical genealogy" which means location based ancestor research. On this website you can create maps which show the distribution of surnames in Germany. Significant concentrations can point to a local root of the family or the family name.

 

PDF bibliographies of the library and music archives
for the Sauk City, Wisconsin, Freie Gemeinde
may be viewed here: http://mki.wisc.edu/Resources/Freie_Gemeinde/Sauk_Gemeinde.htm

 

We are pleased to announce
that the MKI Library is once again
searchable on-line at:
http://csumc.wisc.edu/mki/mkisources/search.html

 

New Library Acquisitions

Please Click Here

 

New MKI Publications

Please Click Here


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