Dr. Amir Engel
Research Fields
- Postwar German Literature
- German Jewish Literature
- German Jewish Intellectual History
About
Dr. Amir Engel is a lecturer in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem German department. He studied philosophy, literature and culture-studies at the Hebrew University and completed his PhD at the German studies department at Stanford University, California, USA. Subsequently, Engel taught and conducted research at the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main. His main topics of interest include German Romanticism and German postwar literature and culture, theories of myth, literature and philosophy and history of culture. He is also interested in intercultural transference, Jewish German culture, and German 20th century intellectual history. He has written a book about Gershom Scholem and has published articles about Hannah Arendt, Paul Celan, Martin Buber, Jacob Taubes, Salomon Maimon and others.
Selected Publications
Amir Engel, Gershom Scholem: An Intellectual Biography (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017) (Paperback edition Summer 2019).
Jacob Taubes, From Cult to Culture. Eds. Amir Engel and Charlotte Fonrobert, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2010, 445 pp.
Amir Engel, “A Brave New Word: Hannah Arendt’s Postwar Reading of Kafka” in Kafka after Kafka Eds. Iris Bruce and Mark Gelber (Rochester: Camden House), 2019, 29-44.
Amir Engel, “Between Consequential Memory and Destruction: Karl Jaspers, Jean Améry, and the Intellectual History of Postwar West-Germany,” New German Critique 140, Vol. 47, No. 2, 2020, 1- 20.
Teaching
Bachelor's degree courses
Love and Romantics in German Literature (Fall-Spring 2018-9)
Literature after the Catastrophe: Postwar German Culture (Spring 2019)
Freud-Nietzsche-Marx: Meditations on a Changing World (Fall 2019)
Introduction to German Literature in the 19th and 20th centuries (Spring 2019)
Introduction to German Literature in the 18th and 19th centuries (Fall 2018)
The German Enlightenment (Spring 2018)
Introduction to German Literature in the 19th and 20th centuries (Spring 2018)
Introduction to German Literature in the 18th and 19th centuries (Fall 2017)
Master's degree courses
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