Dilenschneider Lecture: "The Problem of the Nationstate" with Prof. James Sheehan

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Location: Eck Visitors Center

The Department of History invites faculty, students, and staff to join us for the 2015 Dilenschneider Lecture Series in History on April 28-30, 2015:

James Sheehan, 2015 Dilenschneider Lecturer

States - Tuesday, April 28

5:00 p.m. at Eck Visitors Center

Nations - Wednesday, April 29

5:00 p.m. at Hesburgh Center Auditorium

The Problem of the Nationstate - Thursday, April 30

5:00 p.m. at Eck Visitors Center 

James J. Sheehan is Dickason Professor in the Humanities and Professor of History emeritus at Stanford University. He has written five books and edited several others, mostly on German history in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In 2000, he published Museums in the German Art World: From the End of the Old Regime to the Rise of Modernism.  Where Have All the Soldiers Gone?: The Transformation of Modern Europe, published by Houghton Mifflin in January 2008, has been translated into German, Italian, and Danish. The winner of four awards for outstanding teaching, he has been a visiting fellow at Oxford University and the Wissenschaftskolleg in Berlin, won the Humboldt Research Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Berlin Prize Fellowship at the American Academy in Berlin. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Orden pour le Mérite, and is a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He has been awarded the Verdienstkreuz by the Federal Republic of Germany. In 2005 he served as president of the American Historical Association.

 

Sponsored by the Department of History and the Kellogg Institute for International Studies with additional support from the Nanovic Institute for European Studies.