Friday, May 8, 2009

Pictures from Germany Trip

Please see the following link:

Germany and Israeli Independence Day

(The first several pictures are from Easter egg coloring with Dawn and her student Hannah, and Dawn's aborted trip to the zoo with Hannah and her family, which ended up at the Negev Brigade Monument). Pictures then follow in chronological order, beginning at Tel Aviv Airport (refer to post on trip to Germany for specifics).

Dissertation Update

Since I returned from Germany, I have been busily reading and brainstorming on my doctoral thesis. The Berlin conference (see previous post) gave me several intriguing ideas to pursue. Following a meeting yesterday, Thursday, May 7th, with my advisor, I am happy to report that I now have a topic! It still deals with Stefan Zweig's novellas and novels, but now it is more concrete.

Specifically, I will be researching Stefan Zweig's philosopy of freedom as expressed across several of his novels and novellas, and comparing them to the views of some of his contemporaries, probably including Rudolf Steiner. For those that are wondering what books they should read of Stefan Zweig's, I recommend:

Clarissa
The Royal Game (or Chess Story) Original: Schachnovelle
The Post Office Girl (published for the first time in English in 2008) Original: Rausch der Verwandlung

Trip to Germany April 15th-26th, 2009

OK, I've been slacking off on the blog. I'm trying to focus on research to get as far as I can in the PhD before we leave Israel in August 2010. I was also in Germany for 11 days in April.

On Wednesday, April 15th, I flew to Germany to visit friends, and most importantly, attend an international Stefan Zweig conference co-organized by my PhD advisor along with another Dr. from the university in Potsdam. What followed was an exhausting yet rejuvenating 11 1/2 days. I took the train to Kaiserslautern when I arrived in Frankfurt, and spent 3 relaxing nights (Wednesday, Thursday, Friday) in Rodenbach, the village near Ramstein Air Base where I lived with my family from 1983 to 1986. Peter and Edith, the couple with whose son Marco, I went to kindergarten with, were wonderful hosts as usual. I also saw Heiner and Ilse, another couple who are good friends of my family's. It rained most of the time, but I was able to get a fair amount of Hebrew done and rest for a change.

On Saturday, April 18th, I took the train from Kaiserslautern to Augsburg to visit Sabine and her boyfriend "Sigi" (Sigfried). Sabine and I met during my junior year study abroad in Erlangen in 2000-01. On Sunday, they took me to the cloister of Oberschoenenfeld where some 21 nuns still reside, along with a restuarant, a religious-themed gift shop, and a beutiful 1700s era church. Also on the site is an 18th century recreation of a straw-roofed house. We also visited Sabine's parents nearby on their beautiful old farmhouse in the country.

On Sunday evening, April 19th, I left Augsburg for Erlangen, where I stayed the next 2 nights at Christina Hein's, one of the tutors from our junior year program and now the Director of the Erlangen Kalamazoo College exchange program. On Monday, I had lunch and chatted with "Mutti" Stark, Mom's host mother from her Kalamazoo College days at her retirement community, and had Kaffee und Kuchen with Christina, her friend Julia, and Britta (the other junior year tutor) and her 1 yr. old daughter Nerea in the afternoon. I also found time to visit Kaufland and pick up the requested varieties of chocolate and some Multivitaminsaft (juice) for the train the next day.

Tuesday morning, April 21st, I left on the train for Chemnitz to visit Nadine, her boyfriend Herbert, and Nadine's parents, Karin and Frank, who had invited me. Nadine and I worked together in the German Studies Center at BGU here in Israel, and her parents visited with her in February after the Gaza War ended. Tuesday afternoon, they took me to Miniwelt (Miniworld) in the countryside some 25 km. from Chemnitz. In the evening, we had an amazing variety of grilled meats for dinner and sat by a large fire in their backyard afterwords. Their backyard also had several fruit trees, as well as a sizable garden plot ready and waiting for planting.

Wednesday, April 22nd, after a large, late breakfast, we packed up and Karin drove Nadine and me to Berlin for the Zweig conference, where she also had a work related meeting Thursday afternoon. From 6 pm Wednesday evening until Friday at 4 pm, was one long series of lectures on Stefan Zweig. Thursday evening I took the subway almost an hour to the FU Berlin, where I checked out what resources the library there had on Zweig until the library closed at 22:00.

Friday afternoon, April 24th, I walked to the DDR Muesum (Deutsche Demokratische Republik... the former East Germany) across from the Berliner Dom on the Spree (pronounced Shpray...the "h" is intentional) before heading back to the hostel to get my stuff and walk the "15 minutes" (more like 30) to the Berlin Hauptbahnhof (Central Station) for the ride to Goettingen and Julia and Joerg Meyer's. I met Julia in Bonn in 2002-03 and Joerg and Julia came to our wedding. At the time (2006), Joerg was a finishing his PhD in physics while working at Fermi labs near Chicago. He is now a post-doc at Uni Goettingen.

Saturday, April 25th, after a large, late breakfast, we went downtown and they gave me a brief tour of Goettingen's Innenstadt, including the St. Jacobi Kirche, the Gaenseliesel Fountain, which tradition has that newly minted PhDs must come to bestow a bouqet of flowers to the statue upon successful defense of their dissertation. The weather was beautiful, sunny and in the 70s, as it had been since four days of rain ended Saturday, April 18th. We enjoyed fancy ice cream desserts in an outdoor cafe, before heading back to Julia and Joerg's for another "Grillabend" of delectable steaks and and homemade potato salad.

Sunday, April 26th, I said goodbye to Julia and Joerg at the train station and took the 11:17 ICE (InterCityExpress...Germany's fastest and coolest trains) to Frankfurt/Main Hbf, where I switched to the 13:10 ICE to Koeln/Deutz and the 14:30 RE (Regional Express) to Bonn Hbf, where I arrived on time at 14:56 and met Jan and Wilfried, both current PhD students whom I had met in 2002-03 in Bonn. Jan successfully completed a half-marathon in Bonn's annual marathon earlier in the day, and we settled in to a nearby outdoor cafe to watch the last of the marathoners finish the race. Then, it was 5 minutes back to the Hbf (Hauptbahnhof) for the 17:01 RE to Koeln/Deutz follow by the 17:40 ICE to Frankfurt Flughafen (Airport), where I checked in for my 20:45 Swiss Airlines flight to Zurich and connecting flight to Tel Aviv. (There's a non-stop Lufthansa flight, but my frequent flier ticket made me change planes on the way back rather than fly non-stop both ways, as I did on April 15th from Tel Aviv to Frankfurt.

After perusing the duty-free shops in Frankfurt, both flights went off without a hitch and we arrived on time at 3:30 am Monday morning in Tel Aviv. Swiss Airlines even handed out little swiss chocolates to every passenger on the Frankfurt-Zurich flight. Once I was back in Be'er Sheva, around 8 am, I wrote and prepared 4 pages to give a short presentation that afternoon in our Contemporary Topics in Literature Seminar on Abraham Cahan's The Rise of David Levinsky. Whew, what a trip!