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Andreas Huyssen is the Villard Professor of German and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, where he
served as founding director of the Center for Comparative Literature and Society (1998-2003). He chaired the
Department of Germanic Languages from 1986-92 and again as of 2005. He is one of the founding editors of New
German Critique, the leading journal of German Studies in the United States (1974-) and he serves on the
editorial boards of October, Constellations, Germanic Review, Transit,
Key Words (UK), and Critical Space (Tokyo). In 2005, he won Columbia’s coveted Mark van Doren
teaching award. His research and teaching focus on 18th-20th-century German literature and culture, international
modernism, Frankfurt School critical theory, postmodernism, cultural memory of historical trauma in transnational
contexts, and, most recently, urban culture and globalization.
Huyssen has published widely in German and English and his work has been translated into Spanish, Portuguese,
Swedish, Danish, Turkish, Japanese and Chinese. His books include Drama des Sturm und Drang (1980),
After the Great Divide: Modernism, Mass Culture, Postmodernism (1986), Postmoderne: Zeichen eines
kulturellen Wandels (ed. with Klaus Scherpe, 1986), Modernity and the Text: Revisions of German Modernism
(ed. with David Bathrick, 1989), Twilight Memories: Marking Time in a Culture of Amnesia (1995),
Present Pasts: Urban Palimpsests and the Politics of Memory (2003), and the forthcoming edited volume on
the culture of non-Western cities entitled Other Cities, Other Worlds: Urban Imaginaries in a Globalizing World
(Duke UP, 2008). He also works on a book project on modernist miniatures, a little studied experimental form
of modernist writing, widespread in French and German modernism from Baudelaire to Rilke, Benn, Kafka, Kracauer,
Musil, and Benjamin.
List of publications by Andreas Huyssen
E-mail: ah26@columbia.edu
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