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Thyssen-Heideking Fellowships |
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This one-year postdoctoral residential fellowship at the University of Cologne was established in memory of the late Jürgen Heideking. The fellowship, supported by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation, is intended for American scholars working in one of the three areas to which Professor Heideking made important contributions: American history and German-American relations from the early modern period to the present; international history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, including the history of international relations and the comparative history of colonial systems and societies; and twentieth-century German history, with emphasis on America's influence on German society between 1918 and 1949. Recipient 2002-2003
- Dr. Frank Biess, University of California at San Diego
The Protracted War: Returning POWs and the Making of East and West German Citizens, 1945–1955.
Recipient 2003-2004
- Dr. Max Paul Friedman, University of Florida
Cold War Critiques from Abroad: Western European and Latin American Views of American Foreign Policy, 1945-1989.
Recipient 2004-2005
- Dr. Dorothee Brantz (SUNY Buffalo)
Slaughter in the City: The Rise of Modern Abattoirs in 19th-Century Paris, Berlin, and Chicago
Recipient 2005-2006
- Dr. Brian McCook (University of California, Berkeley)
Migration, Citizenship, and Polish Integration in the Ruhr Valley and Northeastern Pennsylvannia, 1870-1924
Recipient 2006-2007
- Jeff R. Schutts (Douglas College)
Coca-Cola History: A "Refreshing" Look at German-American Relations
Recipient 2007-2008
- Eric Kurlander (Stetson University)
Living with Hitler: Liberal Democrats between Resistance and Collaboration, 1933-1945
Recipient 2008-2009
- Lora Wildenthal (Rice University)
The Politics of Human Rights Activism in West Germany
Recipient 2009-2010
- Nicole Kvale (University of Wisconsin Madison)
Emigrant Trains: Migratory Transportation Networks through Germany and the United States, 1847-1914
Recipient 2010-2011
- Brian K. Feltman (Ohio State University)
The Culture of Captivity: German Prisoners, British Captors, and Manhood in the Great War, 1914-1920
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