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About Dr. Steigmann-Gall His current scholarly itinerary includes contributions to several edited volumes, one on “political religion” theory published in Germany through Wallstein Verlag, and another on racial and religious antisemitism published through Indiana University Press. He is also contributing the chapter on “Religion and the Churches” to the forthcoming Oxford Short History of Germany: The Third Reich, and the chapter on Germany to the forthcoming Clerical Fascism volume through Routledge. He has presented his research at several academic and public venues in North America and Europe, most recently at the Modern European Research Seminar in the Faculty of History at Cambridge University. In his current book project, tentatively titled “Mutability and Constructions of Race in the Third Reich,” Steigmann-Gall will explore the ways in which Nazis attempted to gauge the racial affiliation of those who, in the Nazi imagination, were neither German nor Jewish. He is particularly interested in how the Nazis determined racial identity for so-called “half-castes” of mixed European and non-European ancestry, and the ways in which the Nazis acknowledged that cultural categories guided their racial thinking. In support of his research he has earned grants and awards from the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Max-Planck Institut für Geschichte in Germany, the Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism in Israel, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and Oxford Brookes University in the United Kingdom, as well as from the Office of Research and Graduate Study at Kent State University. At universities in the United States and Canada, he has taught a variety of courses relating to different aspects of modern European and Jewish history, including lecture courses on “Germany since 1870,” “Modern Europe, 1890-1945,” and “The Holocaust,” as well as undergraduate and graduate colloquia on topics such as “Comparative Fascism,” and “Religion and Society in the Modern West.” He won the Distinguished Teaching Award from the College of Arts and Sciences at Kent State in 2004, and has been nominated an additional three times. |
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