Dr Katherine Calvert
- Position: Leverhulme Research Fellow
- Areas of expertise: Nineteenth- to twenty-first-century German literature and print media; History of emotions; German political cultural production; History of German social and political movements.
- Email: K.Calvert@leeds.ac.uk
- Location: B.20 Michael Sadler Building
- Website: Twitter | LinkedIn | ORCID
Profile
I joined the University of Leeds as a Leverhulme Research Fellow in November 2024. My project is entitled Mobilising the Masses: Appeals to Emotion in German Political Writing, 1871 – 1933 and investigates how discourses of emotion shaped political appeals to mass audiences in Imperial and Weimar Germany. Building on interdisciplinary approaches from cultural studies and the history of emotions, I will study how voices from across the political spectrum adopted and adapted ideas of emotion and scientific rationality in attempts to attract support for disparate causes, including the colonial movement, feminism, pacifism, and communism, around the turn of the twentieth century.
Before joining the University of Leeds, I was a Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Research Fellow at University College Dublin (2022 – 2024), where my research examined the relationships between political activism and psychological well-being in German feminist essays, anthologies, and pamphlets from around 1970 to the present day. I have also held a Leibniz Summer Fellowship at the Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History in Potsdam (2024) and previously taught German language at Nottingham Trent University (2021 – 2022) and German language, history, and culture at the University of Sheffield (2017 – 2022), where I also completed my WRoCAH-funded PhD in 2021. My doctoral thesis explored representations of motherhood in socialist and socially-critical women’s writing from the Weimar Republic.
Research interests
My research expertise encompasses nineteenth- to twenty-first-century German literature, print media and cultural history, the history of emotions, and the history of German social movements, in particular the German women’s movements. I am especially interested in how and why complex political and psychological ideas are suffused with the language of emotion and disseminated to mass audiences via print media and popular fiction publications. My work investigates the tensions that emerge around political discourses and practices, particularly in relation to political authors’ and journalists’ popularisation of scientific ideas to underpin claims of rationality in texts promoting highly emotionally laden ideologies.
Publications:
Monograph
- Katherine E Calvert, Modeling Motherhood in Weimar Germany: Political and Psychological Discourses in Women’s Writing, Camden House (2023).
Journal Articles
- Katherine E Calvert, ‘Emotional Regimes and Medical Interventions in the 1970s Campaign Against Paragraph 218’, Germanistik in Ireland (2024).
- Katherine E Calvert, ‘Emotional Transformations and Activist Communities: Harnessing Emotion in German Anti-racist and Anti-fascist Political Essays’, Forum for Modern Language Studies, 60:2 (2024). This article was awarded the 2023 Forum for Modern Language Studies prize.
- Katherine E Calvert, ‘Making the Case Against Paragraph 218: Narrative and Discursive Strategies in Else Kienle’s Frauen: Aus dem Tagebuch einer Ärztin’, German Life and Letters, 75:1 (2022). This article was awarded the 2020 Women in German Studies essay prize.
- Katherine E Calvert, ‘Family and Communism in Maria Leitner’s Mädchen mit drei Namen and Hermynia Zur Mühlen’s Lina: Erzählung aus dem Leben einese Dienstmädchens’, Journal of European Studies, 51:2 (2021).
Qualifications
- Fellow of the Higher Education Academy
- PhD German Studies (University of Sheffield)
- MRes German and Comparative Literature (King's College London)
- BA (Hons) French and German Studies (University of Warwick)
Professional memberships
- Association for German Studies (AGS)
- Women in German Studies (W+IGS)
Student education
I presently teach guest seminars/lectures on the modules GERM1200 Twentieth Century German History and GERM1140/1145 Exploring German-Speaking Cultures, Histories and Societies.