Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
2010, R. Johler, C. Marchetti and M. Scheer (eds), Doing Anthropology in Wartime and War Zones. World War I and the Cultural Sciences in Europe, Bielefeld: Transcript, 337-351.
2013 •
This paper explores the sexual economy of the quasi-urban context of early colonial Windhoek – a settlement characterised by the dominating presence of the German colonial military – and elsewhere during the first two to three decades of colonial control in Hereroland. Colonising men's and colonised women's sexual interaction is explored in the different spatial and social settings of an incipient colonial settlement. This encounter was characterised by violence and consent, mainly transient, yet sometimes permanent and in manifold commercial and other arrangements, at times even offering an economic niche for enterprising women.
I. Warnke (ed.), Deutsche Sprache und Kolonialismus. Aspekte der nationalen Kommunikation zwischen 1884 und 1919, Berlin, New York: de Gruyter, 349-364.
‘Propaganda und Unterhaltung: Kolonialismus im frühen Kino’2009 •
Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television
Locating Early Film Audiences: Voluntary associations and colonial film2002 •
European History Quarterly
From Africa to Auschwitz: How German South West Africa Incubated Ideas and Methods Adopted and Developed by the Nazis in Eastern Europe2005 •
2006 •
Kapitel aus Berner/Hoffmann/Lange: Sensible Sammlungen. Aus dem anthropologischen Depot. 2011. Anthropometrie/Namibia/Rassenforschung/Tonaufnahmen
Journal of Namibian Studies
Discursive Traces of Genocide in Johannes Spiecker’s Travel Diary (1905–1907)2014 •
Journal of Namibian Studies, 16 (2014): 83 – 114 ISSN 2197-5523 (online)
Martin Siefkes: Discursive traces of genocide in Johannes Spiecker's travel diary (1905–1907Visual Anthropology
Around the World in Eighty Minutes: The Travel Lecture Film2002 •
2018 •
Journal of Namibian Studies
‘Ja, es musste sein!’ German settler perceptions of violence during the Herero and Nama War (1904–1907)2018 •
PhiN-Beiheft
Maedza (2017) The Kaisers Concubines:Remembering African Women in Eugenics and Genocide. PhiN-Beiheft2017 •
Doing Anthropology in Wartime and War Zones. World War I and the Cultural Sciences in Europe
Captive Voices: Phonographic Recordings in the German and Austrian Prisoner-of-War Camps of World War I2010 •
Journal of Namibian Studies, 11 (2012): 83–101 ISSN: 1863-5954
Jonas Kreienbaum: Guerrilla wars and colonial concentration camps The exceptional case of German South West Africa 1904 19082012 •
Mark Levene & Penny Roberts (eds.), The Massacre in History. New York and Oxford
'A certain rigorous treatment of all parts of the nation': the annihilation of the Herero in German South West Africa, 19041999 •
Journal of Namibian Studies, 19 (2016): 69 – 89 ISSN: 1863-5954
Krista Molly O'Donnell: "The public danger of rumor-mongering": News in German colonial South West Africa during the First World War2016 •
Journal of Genocide Research
Patterns of Frontier Genocide 1803-1910: The Aboriginal Tasmanians, the Yuki of California, and the Herero of Namibia2004 •
In Grønstad, A. & Gustafsen, H. 2012. Ethics and Images of Pain, s. 193-207. Oxford, Routledge
The Sanctified Fallen: The War Film as a WitnessProoftexts
Auch ruhiges Land : Remembrance and Testimony in Paul Celan's Nuit et Brouillard Translation2002 •
Journal of Namibian Studies, 16 (2014): 7 – 45 ISSN 2197-5523 (online)
Mathias Guenther: “With their backs to the wall … they were fighting like the cornered mongoose”: Contextualizing Kalahari San violence and warfare historically2014 •
Journal of Namibian Studies, 3 (2008), 31-61
Andreas Eckl: The Herero genocide of 1904: Source-critical and methodological considerations2008 •
Journal of Namibian Studies, 12 (2012): 29 – 46 ISSN 2197-5523 (online)
Tilman Dedering: Compounds, camps, colonialism2012 •