Veranstaltungsverzeichnis

Hinweis

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Lehrveranstaltungen SoSe 2025

English-Speaking Cultures: Language, Text, Media, M. A.

UEP Part 1 - Using English in the Professional World (6 CP)

The module provides the more practically-focused language, presentation and negotiation skills foundation for the other modules in the study programme.
Read more... https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/maesc/modules/

Modulverantwortliche: Dr. Vanessa Herrmann, vanessa.herrmann@uni-bremen.de
VAKTitel der VeranstaltungDozentIn
10-M80-1-UEP 1-01Using English in the Professional World 1 - Group 1 (in englischer Sprache)

Übung
ECTS: 6

Termine:
wöchentlich Mo 12:15 - 13:45 SFG 1020 (2 SWS)

Note: This course compensates for the cancelled one in WiSe 24/25. Therefore, those students who were affected by the cancellation are prioritised when distributing the places. Those students who begin their studies in summer 2025 have to take the course another time.

The course is designed to develop academic writing skills at a professional level so as to prepare students for their work in the MA programme. We will review the fundamental aspects of academic writing at the structural level, including thesis statements, paragraphing, developing cohesion etc. We explore different text types that you will be expected to use in your academic studies. In addition, emphasis will be placed on further developing the language skills necessary to express complex concepts in both written and spoken form as you move forward in developing critical thinking and writing skills.

Dr. Vanessa Herrmann
10-M80-1-UEP 1-02Using English in the Professional World 1 - Group 2 (in englischer Sprache)

Übung
ECTS: 6

Termine:
wöchentlich Fr 12:00 - 14:00 GW2 B2900
Meron Biruk Beshewamyeleh (LB)

ExMo 1 - Extension Module 1 (9 CP)

In Extension Module 1, students develop the competence to deal with more complex theoretical, conceptual and methodological approaches within the three interrelated profile areas, i.e. language, text and media.
Read more... https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/maesc/modules/

Modulbeauftragter: N.N.
VAKTitel der VeranstaltungDozentIn
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-01Sociolinguistics (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 B1630 (2 SWS)
Dr. Inke Du Bois
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-02Forensic Lingustics (in englischer Sprache)
Modultyp B/C im Studiengang Language Sciences, M.A.

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Di 14:15 - 15:45 SFG 0140 (2 SWS)

Forensic Linguistics is a branch of Applied Linguistics that involves the examination of spoken or written language evidence to aid in the resolution of legal disputes, criminal cases, and investigations. During this seminar, we will look at specimen of threatening communication from different historical and contemporary varieties of English, and we will focus on the question of how meaning and implied meaning are construed, how the effect of threatening is achieved and what kind of evidence may assist in the identification of suspects.

Prof. Dr. Arne Peters
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-03English in Africa (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Di 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 A3390 (CIP-Labor FB 10) (2 SWS)

As a result of colonisation, English was transplanted to Africa and has spread over the entire African continent. It has become an official language in approximately one third of all African nations. The degree to which English is spoken as a first or second language variety in the various African countries depends mostly on the colonial history, linguistic situation, language policy and language planning programs of these countries.

In this seminar, we will investigate the historical and socio-political developments that have determined the formation of African varieties of English and we will also study the functions English serves in various African countries and speaker's attitudes towards this language.
Moreover, we will survey recent corpus-linguistic research on Africa Englishes that has provided detailed descriptions of the distinctive linguistic characteristics of particular varieties.

Depending on the assessment needed for their study program and module, students can opt for oral presentations based on extensive reading or corpus-based research projects on selected African Englishes.

Basic introductory reading:
Schneider, Edgar W. 2011/2020. English around the World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (chapters 5.2 and 6.1)

Prof. Dr. Marcus Callies
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-04Environmentalism and Film (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 14:15 - 15:45 GW2 B2890 (2 SWS)
Dr. Karin Esders-Angermund
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-05Water and/in Cultural Theory (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Fr 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 B1630 (2 SWS)

This seminar introduces students to anglophone cultural theory that turns to water as a primary object of study (including oceans, lakes, rivers, and wetlands) and tries to think with/through/from liquid epistemologies. By studying key theoretical texts and case studies, students will familiarize themselves with influential theories and key concepts that, e.g., question the centering of dry land over wet environments, human over non-human perspectives, and the individual over interrelation. Exemplary cultural analyses of primary objects, such as film, literature, and art, will complement the study of theory and help students advance their skills in cultural analysis.
The class is open to M.A. E-SC students studying the Extension Module 1 and 2. International exchange students and students doing ‘Freiwillige Zusatzleistungen,’ general studies, or ‘Ersatzleistungen’ as well as students from the Master TnL (Profil- or Vertiefungsmodul) may also be admitted. Prior enrolment via Stud.IP is mandatory and admission is limited to a maximum of thirty-five students. Please check Stud.IP regularly for updates.
Requirements
• active participation in weekly in-person meetings,
• in-depth study of the primary and secondary material (including extensive weekly reading assignments) in preparation for each session,
• graded term paper or ungraded assignment in accordance with the respective module requirements.

Dr. Paula von Gleich
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-06Mediterranean Shakespeare (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Di 18:15 - 19:45 GW2 B3010 (Kleiner Studierraum) (2 SWS)

Many of Shakespeare’s plays are set in the Mediterranean region; Italy, for instance, has been called Shakespeare’s “favourite imaginative haunt”. Padua, Rome, Sicily, Verona, Venice – these are just some of the Italian locations in which Shakespeare set one or several of his plays. Other Mediterranean settings include Alexandria, Athens, Marseilles, and Troy. Partly, the fact that Shakespeare chose Mediterranean settings for so many of his plays reflects a broader Elizabethan fascination with this region as a source of classical civilisation and a cultural archive. But Shakespeare’s Mediterranean plays frequently also comment on his contemporary England. We will consider how Shakespeare used the Mediterranean to examine the rise and fall of great empires and their leaders, as well as to explore the poetic language of love, which was, after all, modelled on Italian poets and verse forms.

Required Reading:
Shakespeare, William. Julius Caesar (c. 1599).
Shakespeare, William. Anthony and Cleopatra (c. 1606-7).
Shakespeare, William. A Midsummer Night’s Dream (c. 1595).
Shakespeare, William. Troilus and Cressida (c. 1602).
Preferred edition: Arden Shakespeare, Third Series.

N. N.
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-07Water and Environment in North American Literature (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 12:15 - 13:45 FVG M0160 (2 SWS)
Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-11African Diaspora Studies and Afroeuropean Literature (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Einzeltermine:
Mo 07.04.25 10:00 - 16:00
Mo 14.04.25 10:00 - 16:00
Fr 09.05.25 10:00 - 16:00
Fr 16.05.25 10:00 - 17:00
Prof. Dr. Julia Borst
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-12The Question of Freedom: Reading Margaret Atwood and Toni Morrison (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 12:15 - 13:45 GW2 B2880 (2 SWS)

We will read Margaret Atwood's dystopian genre, "The Handmaid's Tale" and Toni Morrison's, bildungsroman, "The Bluest Eye", to engage with the question of freedom. Through close readings and critical discussions, we will examine how each novel explores the question of personal and collective freedom for young girls and women, vis-a-vis the nature of white supremacist and patriarchal systems of power that not only impacts their material life but also reaches or attempts to reach into their bodies and minds to control their perception of themselves in relation to the world.

Dr. Okanmiyinoluwa Oluwadunni Talabi
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-13Tba (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 16:15 - 17:45 GW1 A0160 (2 SWS)
N. N.
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-14Tba (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 10:15 - 11:45 GW1 B1070 (2 SWS)
N. N.
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-15Tba (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 16:15 - 17:45 HS 1010 (Kleiner Hörsaal) (2 SWS)
N. N.

SuStMo - Supplementary Studies Module (9 CP)

Students may opt for language courses offered both by Faculty 10 and the Foreign Language Centre (Fremdsprachenzentrum Bremen - FZHB), relevant courses and lecture series offered both by Faculty 10 and other faculties, or receive credit points for additional internships and academic exchange to Anglophone countries.
Read more... https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/maesc/modules/

Modulverantwortliche: Jana Wachsmuth, jwachsmu@uni-bremen.de
VAKTitel der VeranstaltungDozentIn
10-GS-8-02E-SC Bookclub

Übung
N. N.
10-GS-8-03E-SC Filmclub

Übung
N. N.
10-GS-8-04E-SC Animeclub

Übung
N. N.
10-M80-2-SuStMo-01Indigenous Art and Poetry in the United States

Seminar

Einzeltermine:
Mi 07.05.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 14.05.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 21.05.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 28.05.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 04.06.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 11.06.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 18.06.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Mi 25.06.25 10:00 - 14:00 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum )
Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf

UEP Part 2 - Using English in the Professional World (3 CP)

The module provides the more practically-focused language, presentation and negotiation skills foundation for the other modules in the study programme.
Read more... https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/maesc/modules/

Modulbeauftragte: Dr. Vanessa Herrmann, vanessa.herrmann@uni-bremen.de
VAKTitel der VeranstaltungDozentIn
10-M80-2-UEP2-01Using English in the Professional World 2 - Group 1 (in englischer Sprache)

Übung
ECTS: 3

Termine:
wöchentlich Mo 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 A4020 (2 SWS)
Dr. Vanessa Herrmann
10-M80-2-UEP2-02Using English in the Professional World 2 - Group 2

Übung
ECTS: 3

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 12:15 - 13:45 SuUB 4330 (Studio I Medienraum ) (2 SWS)
Anne Kirkham, M.A.

ExMo 2 - Extension Module 2 (9 CP)

In Extension Module 2, students analyse and discuss topical issues of the three interrelated profile areas, i.e. language, text and media.
Read more... https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/maesc/modules/

Modulverantwortliche: Dr. Jana Nittel, jnittel@uni-bremen.de (bis zum 30.09.2024)
VAKTitel der VeranstaltungDozentIn
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-01Sociolinguistics (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 B1630 (2 SWS)
Dr. Inke Du Bois
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-02Forensic Lingustics (in englischer Sprache)
Modultyp B/C im Studiengang Language Sciences, M.A.

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Di 14:15 - 15:45 SFG 0140 (2 SWS)

Forensic Linguistics is a branch of Applied Linguistics that involves the examination of spoken or written language evidence to aid in the resolution of legal disputes, criminal cases, and investigations. During this seminar, we will look at specimen of threatening communication from different historical and contemporary varieties of English, and we will focus on the question of how meaning and implied meaning are construed, how the effect of threatening is achieved and what kind of evidence may assist in the identification of suspects.

Prof. Dr. Arne Peters
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-03English in Africa (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Di 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 A3390 (CIP-Labor FB 10) (2 SWS)

As a result of colonisation, English was transplanted to Africa and has spread over the entire African continent. It has become an official language in approximately one third of all African nations. The degree to which English is spoken as a first or second language variety in the various African countries depends mostly on the colonial history, linguistic situation, language policy and language planning programs of these countries.

In this seminar, we will investigate the historical and socio-political developments that have determined the formation of African varieties of English and we will also study the functions English serves in various African countries and speaker's attitudes towards this language.
Moreover, we will survey recent corpus-linguistic research on Africa Englishes that has provided detailed descriptions of the distinctive linguistic characteristics of particular varieties.

Depending on the assessment needed for their study program and module, students can opt for oral presentations based on extensive reading or corpus-based research projects on selected African Englishes.

Basic introductory reading:
Schneider, Edgar W. 2011/2020. English around the World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (chapters 5.2 and 6.1)

Prof. Dr. Marcus Callies
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-04Environmentalism and Film (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 14:15 - 15:45 GW2 B2890 (2 SWS)
Dr. Karin Esders-Angermund
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-05Water and/in Cultural Theory (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Fr 10:15 - 11:45 GW2 B1630 (2 SWS)

This seminar introduces students to anglophone cultural theory that turns to water as a primary object of study (including oceans, lakes, rivers, and wetlands) and tries to think with/through/from liquid epistemologies. By studying key theoretical texts and case studies, students will familiarize themselves with influential theories and key concepts that, e.g., question the centering of dry land over wet environments, human over non-human perspectives, and the individual over interrelation. Exemplary cultural analyses of primary objects, such as film, literature, and art, will complement the study of theory and help students advance their skills in cultural analysis.
The class is open to M.A. E-SC students studying the Extension Module 1 and 2. International exchange students and students doing ‘Freiwillige Zusatzleistungen,’ general studies, or ‘Ersatzleistungen’ as well as students from the Master TnL (Profil- or Vertiefungsmodul) may also be admitted. Prior enrolment via Stud.IP is mandatory and admission is limited to a maximum of thirty-five students. Please check Stud.IP regularly for updates.
Requirements
• active participation in weekly in-person meetings,
• in-depth study of the primary and secondary material (including extensive weekly reading assignments) in preparation for each session,
• graded term paper or ungraded assignment in accordance with the respective module requirements.

Dr. Paula von Gleich
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-06Mediterranean Shakespeare (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Di 18:15 - 19:45 GW2 B3010 (Kleiner Studierraum) (2 SWS)

Many of Shakespeare’s plays are set in the Mediterranean region; Italy, for instance, has been called Shakespeare’s “favourite imaginative haunt”. Padua, Rome, Sicily, Verona, Venice – these are just some of the Italian locations in which Shakespeare set one or several of his plays. Other Mediterranean settings include Alexandria, Athens, Marseilles, and Troy. Partly, the fact that Shakespeare chose Mediterranean settings for so many of his plays reflects a broader Elizabethan fascination with this region as a source of classical civilisation and a cultural archive. But Shakespeare’s Mediterranean plays frequently also comment on his contemporary England. We will consider how Shakespeare used the Mediterranean to examine the rise and fall of great empires and their leaders, as well as to explore the poetic language of love, which was, after all, modelled on Italian poets and verse forms.

Required Reading:
Shakespeare, William. Julius Caesar (c. 1599).
Shakespeare, William. Anthony and Cleopatra (c. 1606-7).
Shakespeare, William. A Midsummer Night’s Dream (c. 1595).
Shakespeare, William. Troilus and Cressida (c. 1602).
Preferred edition: Arden Shakespeare, Third Series.

N. N.
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-07Water and Environment in North American Literature (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 12:15 - 13:45 FVG M0160 (2 SWS)
Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-11African Diaspora Studies and Afroeuropean Literature (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Einzeltermine:
Mo 07.04.25 10:00 - 16:00
Mo 14.04.25 10:00 - 16:00
Fr 09.05.25 10:00 - 16:00
Fr 16.05.25 10:00 - 17:00
Prof. Dr. Julia Borst
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-12The Question of Freedom: Reading Margaret Atwood and Toni Morrison (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 12:15 - 13:45 GW2 B2880 (2 SWS)

We will read Margaret Atwood's dystopian genre, "The Handmaid's Tale" and Toni Morrison's, bildungsroman, "The Bluest Eye", to engage with the question of freedom. Through close readings and critical discussions, we will examine how each novel explores the question of personal and collective freedom for young girls and women, vis-a-vis the nature of white supremacist and patriarchal systems of power that not only impacts their material life but also reaches or attempts to reach into their bodies and minds to control their perception of themselves in relation to the world.

Dr. Okanmiyinoluwa Oluwadunni Talabi
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-13Tba (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 16:15 - 17:45 GW1 A0160 (2 SWS)
N. N.
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-14Tba (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 10:15 - 11:45 GW1 B1070 (2 SWS)
N. N.
10-M80-2-ExMo1+2-15Tba (in englischer Sprache)

Seminar

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 16:15 - 17:45 HS 1010 (Kleiner Hörsaal) (2 SWS)
N. N.

MaThe - Master Thesis (30 CP)

Upon completion of the module, students have written their master thesis and they are familiar with:
Read more... https://blogs.uni-bremen.de/maesc/modules/

Modulbeauftragte: Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf, kknopf@uni-bremen.de
VAKTitel der VeranstaltungDozentIn
10-76-6-AP-04Research Colloquium: Cultural Studies of the English-Speaking World (in englischer Sprache)

Colloquium
ECTS: 3

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 14:15 - 15:45 GESPERRT bis 17.04.2025 // FVG O0150 (Seminarraum) (2 SWS)

This colloquium is designed for students who wish to write their B.A. or M.A. theses in the field of cultural studies of the English-Speaking world. Students will be given the opportunity to develop specific cultural studies research projects, including compelling research questions, a strong thesis statement, clear chapter outline, and a well-selected bibliography. Students will practice a number of strategies for planning, structuring and writing B.A./M.A. dissertations and also brush up their knowledge of formal requirements, such as format and layout as well as citation style etc. Students will work both individually and in smaller groups and will present work in progress in oral and written form. Module choices are Bachelor thesis module P or L and Master thesis module MA The respectively.
Prior enrolment via Stud.IP is mandatory.

Dr. Paula von Gleich
10-M80-4-MaThe-01Research colloquium for MA students (in englischer Sprache)

Colloquium

Termine:
wöchentlich Mi 16:15 - 17:45 GW1 B2130 (2 SWS)

This is a research colloquium for MA students who are currently preparing or working on their final theses in the fields of Anthropological Linguistics, Cultural Linguistics, (Applied) English Linguistics and/or World Englishes.

Prof. Dr. Arne Peters
10-M80-4-MaThe-02Research colloquium for MA and PhD students (in englischer Sprache)

Colloquium

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 09:00 - 11:00 GW2 A3340 (2 SWS)

This is a research colloquium for MA and PhD students who are currently working on their final theses in the fields of (applied) English linguistics, World Englishes or SLA with me as their supervisor.

Prof. Dr. Marcus Callies
10-M80-4-MaThe-03Writing a Thesis in North American and Postcolonial Literatures and Cultures (in englischer Sprache)

Colloquium

Termine:
wöchentlich Do 12:15 - 13:45 GW1 B1070 (2 SWS)
Prof. Dr. Kerstin Knopf
10-M80-4-MaThe-04by invitation only: Research Colloquium for MA and PhD students (in englischer Sprache)

Colloquium

Einzeltermine:
Do 24.04.25 13:00 - 17:30 GW2, A3220
Fr 25.04.25 09:00 - 12:30 GW2, A3220
Do 19.06.25 13:00 - 17:30 GW2, A3220
Fr 20.06.25 09:00 - 12:30 GW2, A3220
Do 10.07.25 13:00 - 17:30 GW2, A3220
Fr 11.07.25 09:00 - 12:30 GW2, A3220

Colloquium: by invitation only: Colloquium for PhD / MA students who are currently pursuing their thesis with me (in Englisch) - Brief information

Prof. Dr. Claudia Harsch