Book Presentation, Discussion, Reading
In her study “Threatened Desire: Queer Life in Divided Berlin, 1945–1970,” Dr. Andrea Rottmann traces this history of Berlin during the Cold War in detail using various types of sources.
A reading and discussion will open up spaces for conversation about life in Berlin, the memory of Günter Litfin—the first person shot at the Wall—and the question of how queer life stories are remembered, forgotten, or made visible in public commemoration.
Program
- Welcome: Cornelia Thiele, Curator of Collections and Archives, Berlin Wall Foundation
- Reading and discussion with Dr. Andrea Rottmann
- Moderator: Dr. Sarah Bornhorst, Curator of Eyewitness Accounts and Oral History, Berlin Wall Foundation
Dr. Andrea Rottmann leads the project “LGBTIQ* Movements as Agents of Democratization: Historical, Contemporary, and Future Resources for Imagining Inclusive and Diverse Democracies” at the Friedrich Meinecke Institute at the Free University of Berlin (in cooperation with the Volkswagen Foundation). She studied history and North American studies in Berlin. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of Michigan (USA) with her research on the queer history of Berlin.
IN GERMAN
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