Veranstaltungsarchiv Thomas Mann House
Februar 2023
Wanderausstellung „Democracy Will Win!" An der Northwestern University
University Library, Northwester University
Die Wanderausstellung „Thomas Mann: Democracy Will Win!", die vom Thomas Mann House konzipiert wurde, wird ab Februar in der University Library der Northwestern University ausgestellt.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*
Join the Goethe-Institut Chicago and Northwestern University for a series of talks about Thomas Mann’s advocacy of democracy during the Nazi period, held on the occasion of the exhibition 'Thomas Mann: Democracy Will Win,' currently on view at the University Library.
The exhibition commemorates the series of lecture tours that the Nobel Laureate conducted throughout the Unites States from the late 1930s to the mid-1940s. The first of these tours began at Northwestern University, where more than 4000 people came to hear him speak about the fundamental reasons for liberal democracy. “It is a terrible spectacle when the irrational becomes popular,” Mann said in a speech at the Library of Congress in 1943, and he drew on his considerable powers of thought and expression to counter the sources of this spectacle through his confident motto: “Democracy will win.”
The like-named exhibit, located on the ground floor of the University Library, is divided into two parts: the first charts the changes in Mann’s political views, while the second connects Mann’s lectures tours to current political situations in both Europe and the United States.
The library and the exhibit is open to the public Monday – Saturday, 8am – 6pm with photo ID.
The exhibition was introduced with a symposium on Thomas Mann in exile with Tobias Boes, Veronika Fuechtner and Meike Werner.
Veranstaltungsort:
Charles Deering Memrorial Library
Northwestern University
University, Room 208
1937 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208
Attendance to this event is free and open to the public. Please bring a photo ID for check-in.
Against the Edge: 2023 Frieze Kunstmesse am Thomas Mann House
Los Angeles, Thomas Mann House
Die von Jay Ezra Nayssan im Rahmen der Frieze Art Fair kuratierte Ausstellung „Against the Edge" bringt die Arbeiten zeitgenössischer Künstler:innen in einen Dialog mit den kulturellen Stätten der Westside und fördert dabei Erzählungen über Befreiung und Kreativität sowie über Exil und Verdrängung zutage. Vor diesem Hintergrund und in Zusammenhang mit unserem Jahresthema "Das Politische Mandat der Künste" werden Arbeiten von der Künstlerin Nicola L. exklusiv im Thomas Mann House gezeigt.

*Diese Ausstellung wurde auf englischer Sprache konzipiert*
Frieze Projects: Against the Edge creates multiple parallels between the political and social practices of the Moroccan-born French artist Nicola L. and German author Thomas Mann. Spread throughout the living room and study of Thomas Mann’s home in Pacific Palisades, Nicola L.’s functional sculptures and Penetrables reveal a profound purpose while joshing with the legacy of modernist architecture.
For Both Nicola L. and Thomas Mann, the home was political. It was from his study that Mann would complete his novel Doctor Faustus as well as record his monthly anti-Nazi messages to the German people, broadcast by the BBC to Germany. Nicola, upon returning home to Paris in 1967, took to the streets with students and factory workers in the May 68 demonstrations, making a series of Penetrable protest banners. These banners were punctuated with entries for five to ten heads, with slogans such as WE WANT TO TOUCH, WE WANT TO SEE, WE WANT TO FEEL, WE WANT TO LOVE, and WE WANT TO BE LOVED stenciled across them. On view at the Thomas Mann House is an example of one of these banners with nine head-Penetrables and the phrase NOUS VOULONS ENTENDRE, or, WE WANT TO HEAR, this work resounds with Mann’s broadcasts, each of which began with the words “Germans, Listen!”
In addition to the exhibition at the Thomas Mann House, the Frieze Projects: Against the Edge also includes installations by Tony Cokes at Beyond Baroque in Venice, Kelly Akashi at the Villa Aurora in Pacific Palisades, and Julie Becker at Del Vaz Projects in Santa Monica.
About the Artist
Nicola L. was born in 1932 in Morocco and died in 2019 in Los Angeles. In the 1960s, she worked in Ibiza and Paris and was part of an intellectual and artistic cohort invested in both conceptual art and pop, which included Alberto Greco, Yves Klein, and Marta Minujín. Nicola L.'s oeuvre is full of humor and wit: men as sofas, knobs as nipples, unchaste applications of faux fur. She cleverly made literal the objectification of the female form. Generally, her practice tackled representations of the body and the social persona through conceptual works, functional and domestic items, furniture, installations, paintings, films, performances, and diaristic and dreamlike drawings. Her caricatural anthropomorphic objects question the nature of subjectivity, especially in relation to her feminist concerns. Many of her sculptures invite the viewer to activate them through touch.
Visits by appointment only. Booking is required as capacity is limited.
February, 13-15-17-18
Dieses Projekt ist eine Zusammenarbeit zwischen Del Vaz Projects, der Villa Aurora, FRIEZE und dem Thomas Mann House.
Black Feminism - Gespräch mit Alice Hasters und Morgan Jerkins
New York, Goethe-Institut
Black Feminism mit Alice Hasters und Morgan Jerkins: 2023 Thomas Mann Fellow Alice Hasters, spricht mit Bestsellerautorin Morgan Jerkins in einer persönlichen Lesung und Diskussion zum Thema Black Feminism.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*
Alice Haster’s autobiographical book Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, ''What White People Don't Want to Hear About Racism,'' published by Hanser Verlag, interrogates the structural racism which is present in German society and permeates every aspect of private life. The entrenchment of racism in social structures is often invisible to white subjects but has profound effects on BIPoC, who must contend with cultural intolerance, discrimination, and the pressure to assimilate on a daily basis. Racism does not merely belong to the right-wing fringes of society.
This discussion will explore Black feminism in a transatlantic context, examining the lived experience of Black women in the USA and Europe, including the commonalities and differences, as well as constructing ways of overturning structures of racism and oppression.
Teilnehmer:innen

Alice Hasters is a journalist, author, and podcaster. She studied at the German School of Journalism in Munich and after graduating worked for the »Tagesschau« and Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, among others. Since 2016, Hasters has been producing the podcast »Feuer & Brot« (tr: Fire & Bread) about politics and pop culture together with Maximiliane Häcke. In her publications, she deals with the topics of Afro-German identity, racism, and intersectionality. Hasters was named culture journalist of the year in 2020 by medium magazine. She is the author of Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, published by Hanser Verlag, and is currently a 2023 Fellow at the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.

Morgan Jerkins is the author of the New York Times bestseller This Will Be My Undoing as well as the critically acclaimed books, Wandering In Strange Lands and Caul Baby. She holds a Bachelor’s in Comparative Literature from Princeton University and an MFA from the Bennington Writing Seminars. A Forbes 30 Under 30 Leader in Media alumna and ASME Next award-winning journalist, Jerkins has been an editor at Medium, ESPN, and New York Magazine, among others. Her short-form work has been published in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Guardian, ELLE, Vogue, and The Atlantic, among many other publications. She’s held professorships at Pacific University, Leipzig University in Germany, Columbia University, and the New School. She’s currently based in Harlem.
Veranstaltungsort:
Goethe-Institut New York
30 Irving Place,
New York, NY 10003
Diese Veranstaltung ist öffentlich und der Livestream wird online gestellt
Barrett Memorial Lecture mit Alice Hasters
Shattuck Hall, Mount Holyoke College
2023 Thomas Mann Fellow Alice Hasters hält den Barrett Memorial Lecture am Shattuck Hall des Mount Holyoke College.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*
Under the self-designation as Black, Alice Hasters writes and publishes in particular about Afro-German identity, racism, feminism and intersectionality, and in 2019 she published her autobiographical debut book What white people don’t want to hear about racism, but should know. Hasters was named cultural journalist of the year 2020 by Medium Magazine.
Teilnehmer:innen

Alice Hasters is a journalist, author, and podcaster. She studied at the German School of Journalism in Munich and after graduating worked for the »Tagesschau« and Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, among others. Since 2016, Hasters has been producing the podcast »Feuer & Brot« (tr: Fire & Bread) about politics and pop culture together with Maximiliane Häcke. In her publications, she deals with the topics of Afro-German identity, racism, and intersectionality. Hasters was named culture journalist of the year in 2020 by medium magazine. She is the author of Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, published by Hanser Verlag, and is currently a 2023 Fellow at the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.
Veranstaltungsort:
Shattuck Hall, Cassani Room (102)
Mount Holyoke College
South Hadley, MA 01075
Diese Veranstaltung ist öffentlich.
Who Can Dance? - Ein Gespräch mit Alice Hasters und Kurt A. Douglas
Boston, Goethe-Institut
2023 Thomas Mann Fellow Alice Hasters kommt ins Gespräch mit Kurt A. Douglas, Professor für Tanz an der Boston Conservatory zum Thema Diversität im Tanz.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*
Who dances and how, what we see as culturally and artistically relevant, is strongly influenced by racism – an assumption Alice Hasters is researching in her fellowship at the Thomas Mann House in LA. The notion that "Black people can dance, white people can't" is particularly strong in multi-ethnic societies. In Western societies, dance seems to be something that is incompatible with power. The rich, the white, the male, the heterosexual, the old - they don't dance - unless they have a stage or are not sober.
This conversation will explore some of the following questions:
To what extent does dance as a lived or as a non-lived practice shape black, white and other identities? Can dance be an instrument to dismantle and challenge positions of power? What does diversity in dance really mean? Is dance universal –can everybody dance? Or is dance an expression of your own specific identity?
Teilnehmer:innen

Alice Hasters is a journalist, author, and podcaster. She studied at the German School of Journalism in Munich and after graduating worked for the »Tagesschau« and Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, among others. Since 2016, Hasters has been producing the podcast »Feuer & Brot« (tr: Fire & Bread) about politics and pop culture together with Maximiliane Häcke. In her publications, she deals with the topics of Afro-German identity, racism, and intersectionality. Hasters was named culture journalist of the year in 2020 by medium magazine. She is the author of Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, published by Hanser Verlag, and is currently a 2023 Fellow at the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.

Kurt A. Douglas is Associate Professor of Dance at Boston Conservatory. Originally from Guyana, South America, Douglas earned a B.F.A. in dance from Boston Conservatory and an M.F.A. in dance from Hollins University. After graduating from the Conservatory, Kurt joined the Limón Dance Company, where he performed in many of Limón’s most influential works. Kurt Douglas joined the Boston Conservatory at Berklee faculty in 2015 where he is an instructor of technique, repertory, critical theory, and pedagogy for modern dance.
Veranstaltungsort:
Goethe-Institut Boston
170 Beacon Street,
Boston, MA 02116
Diese Veranstaltung ist öffentlich.
Student Council zu „Political Mandate of the Arts“ - mit Ebow
Online
Gemeinsam mit dem Wende Museum beginnt das Thomas Mann House eine neue virtuelle Veranstaltungsreihe zum Thema Kunst und Politik in Krisenzeiten. Schüler:innen und Studierende laden prominente Gastredner:innen ein, um über Themen aus den Bereichen Kunst, Kultur und Politik in der Gesellschaft zu diskutieren. An jedem letzten Mittwoch im Monat sprechen sie mit Expert:innen und Praktizierenden aus diesen Feldern über das „Politische Mandat der Kunst". Die Interviews finden online statt und sind für die Öffentlichkeit zugänglich.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*
The freedom of art is one of the imperatives of every democracy. But does this freedom make art inconsequential? Does art have a role in addressing social issues, promoting social justice, or in defending democracy when it comes under pressure? In short: does art have a political mandate and what is the role of art in weakened democracies?
The Student Council consists of a team of highly engaged, talented, and diverse high school, undergraduate and graduate students who invite prominent guest speakers to discuss topics relating to art, culture, politics and society.
In conversation with visual artists, musicians, dancers, writers, theater and filmmakers, cultural critics, curators and others, the students will explore how the arts can make a difference in times of social and political crisis; on what social issues they can give new impulses; how they can help shape local communities; and how the alleged freedom and autonomy of the arts might impede or help the arts in terms of social and political significance.
This event will take place online.
Teilnehmer:innen

The guest speaker for the second episode of the series is Berlin-based German rapper of Kurdish descent Ebow (real name Ebru Düzgün). She first attracted attention through guerrilla performances in laundromats, supermarkets and on streetcars. Today, Ebow performs on more conventional stages, but her message remains provocative and political. Solo, but also as a member of the Berlin-based music collective Gaddafi Gals, she raps against sexism, racism, and homophobia, for an open, caring, and equal society. Ebow is currently a 2023 Villa Aurora Fellow in Los Angeles.
Verpasst nicht unsere letzte Episode mit dem Künstler David Horvitz
Lerne das Student Council kennen
Amy Cabrales is a First-Generation third-year undergraduate student at UCLA, studying Sociology, Anthropology, and the Russian Language. She is a Mexican-American, Los Angeles native born in Lynwood, California. Her career interests include museum work, social science research, and teaching English abroad in a Russian-speaking country.
Meghana Halbe is a first-year student at the University of Chicago studying Public Policy. She is from Los Angeles, California and her interests include politics, music, and history. She plans to pursue law school in the future and work in government.
Emma Larson graduated from Williams College in 2021 with degrees in History and Russian, and is currently teaching English in Kazakhstan with the Fulbright Program. Emma hopes to use the future of her professional and academic career to answer important questions about the entirety of the post-Soviet world.
Gianna Machera is currently a junior at Culver City High School. She was born and raised in Los Angeles, California, however she spends most of her holidays and summer traveling various places. She joined the council in 2022 and has absolutely loved the experience and growth she has had so far. She is very excited to see what the next year entails and feels privileged to be part of the council once again.
Natalie McDonald, a 2019 graduate of Pomona College (Claremont, CA), is currently pursuing her Master of Arts in History at California State University, Northridge. Her academic work focuses on migration, citizenship, empire & memory in twentieth-century Europe. Natalie plans to undertake doctoral studies in International/Global History within the next couple years.
Zora Nelson is a current second year undergraduate student at New York University, where she is studying Harp Performance and plans to also pursue Media, Culture, and Communications and Public Policy. As an east coaster, born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she discovered the Wende Museum in the summer of 2022 and is honored to be a part of the council. With a passion for writing, Zora sees a future in storytelling to promote social justice.
Anya Nyman is a current sophomore at Scripps College (Claremont, CA), currently studying History and Africana Studies. She joined the Wende student council in 2023 and is excited to add to the work the council has already done. Her academic interests include anticolonialism, twentieth-century West and Central African history, and international histories of and from the Global South.
Lexi Tooley is a current freshman at Howard University majoring in Art History and Political Science, and minoring in Chinese Language and Culture. She is originally from Los Angeles, California, and has been working with the Wende museum for the past year. She looks forward to continuing the search for truth through these student panels, as well as through learning about and from the curated art currently on display at the Wende.
Becoming Black - Filmvorführung und Diskussion
Goethe-Institut Los Angeles
Am 24. Februar um 19:00 (PT) wird der autobiografische Film BECOMING BLACK mit anschließender Diskussion mit der Filmemacherin und 2023 Villa Aurora Stipendiatin Ines Johnson-Spain, 2023 Thomas Mann Fellow Alice Hasters und Nora Bernard, Mitarbeiterin des Global Media Makers Program bei Film Independent, vorgeführt.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*
About the Documentary BECOMING BLACK
A white couple in the GDR of the 1960s explains to their Black daughter that her skin color is pure coincidence and has no meaning. This is also what the girl likes to believe until, by chance, she discovers the truth at the age of 12.
The child is filmmaker Ines Johnson-Spain.
Long after meeting her biological father's family in Togo, she now, in the role of protagonist and author, reconstructs her family history in the film BECOMING BLACK.
In emotional and open conversations with her stepfather, the atmosphere of silence and repression gets impressively palpable. Slowly it becomes clear how the social environment allowed such a serious denial of facts. The private is political. While exploring her own identity, Ines Johnson-Spain unveils the big taboo that overshadowed her whole childhood, revealing the structural racism in the GDR. In connection with the touching meeting with her late-found Togolese family, the film reflects on identity, family concepts, and social norms. From the 1960s in East Berlin to the present, previously unwritten German history unfolds in this intimate and touching self-portrait.
Germany, 2019, 91 Minutes, digital projection. In German/French with English subtitles. Writer-Director: Ines Johnson-Spain, Director of Photography: Sebastian Winkels, Anne Misselwitz, Editor: Yana Höhnerbach, Executive Producers: Katrin Sandmann, Stefan Matthieu, Producer: Anahita Nazemi.
Production Company: Kobalt Documentary in co-production with Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) (Das kleine Fernsehspiel).
Teilnehmer:innen

Nora Bernard is an Associate for the Global Media Makers program. Previously she has worked in several operations roles for SXSW and the Telluride, Sundance and New York Film Festivals. Currently, she is an Associate Programmer for the Tribeca Festival in the US Narrative Competition category and Telluride Mountainfilm, a documentary festival that specializes in presenting films that focus on activism, environmental preservation, adventure sports, and cultural exchanges. She also has served on committees for Fantastic Fest, UrbanWorld, IndieMemphis, and the Starz #TakeTheLead Writers’ Intensive.

Alice Hasters is a journalist, author, and podcaster. She studied at the German School of Journalism in Munich and after graduating worked for the »Tagesschau« and Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, among others. Since 2016, Hasters has been producing the podcast »Feuer & Brot« (tr: Fire & Bread) about politics and pop culture together with Maximiliane Häcke. In her publications, she deals with the topics of Afro-German identity, racism, and intersectionality. Hasters was named culture journalist of the year in 2020 by medium magazine. She is the author of Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, published by Hanser Verlag, and is currently a 2023 Fellow at the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.

Ines Johnson-Spain, born and raised in the GDR (*1962), studied religious studies at the Free University of Berlin and liberal arts and film history as a guest at the Berlin University of the Arts. She works as a director and screenwriter. She is particularly interested in self-concepts in the field of tension between the individual and society. In the current film BECOMING BLACK she autobiographically dealt with her German/Togolese origin. She is currently a fellow at Villa Aurora.
Veranstaltungsort:
Goethe-Institut Los Angeles Project Space
1901 W. 7th St. Suite AB,
Los Angeles, CA 90057
Attendance to this event is free and open to the public.