Event—Scholarly Seminars

Verena Kick, Georgetown University

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Photobook Politics: The Functional Montage of Design and Ideology in Germany 1915-1945

Description

This paper is the introduction to my book entitled Photobook Politics: Design and Ideology in Germany 1915–1945, which examines how German photobooks from 1915 to 1945 utilized material and design elements to convey political ideologies. The introduction develops the concept of the “functional montage” to describe how photobooks combine images, typography, captions, covers, and formats into a coherent whole that produces political meaning. Unlike avant-garde montage, which relied on jarring juxtapositions, the photobook’s functional montage organizes disparate components into an ordered composition where each element—whether typographical, visual, or material—serves both aesthetic and ideological purposes. Drawing on Soviet film montage, notions of montage as cultural practice, photobook scholarship, and media history, the introduction situates the functional montage within broader debates on book design and mass media in the early twentieth century. By foregrounding the book form itself, it argues that photobooks do not merely illustrate political ideas but enact them through their material and compositional strategies, shaping collective perception and national identity.

About the Speaker

Verena Kick is an Assistant Professor of German at Georgetown University. Her research explores twentieth-century German modernism, visual culture, materiality, photobooks, film, and Digital Humanities. Her book project, Photobook Politics, investigates how German photobooks from 1915 to 1945 employed material and design elements—such as covers, formats, typefaces, and captions—to convey political ideologies. She has published on topics ranging from photomontage in Kurt Tucholsky and John Heartfield’s Deutschland, Deutschland über alles (1929), to Franz Kafka’s drawings, Annemarie Schwarzenbach’s photography, and Werner Herzog’s cinematic concept of history. Most recently, she published an article on the use of the “archive effect” in Thomas Heise’s essay film Heimat ist ein Raum aus Zeit (2019). In the digital realm, she co-directs with Prof. Carsten Strathausen Adapting Kafka, a multimodal project that compiles and analyzes editions and adaptations of Franz Kafka’s The Trial (1925).

About the German Studies Seminar Series

The Newberry Library German Studies Seminar series provides a forum for scholarship-in-progress in the area of German studies. The seminar is particularly interested in papers that cross disciplinary boundaries and that reconceptualize the materials and conventions of German Studies as a field, including beyond the frames of the German language and nation state. Like all Newberry Scholarly Seminars, meetings are conversational and free and open to faculty, graduate students, and members of the public, who register in advance to request papers.

Register and Request Paper

This event is free, but all participants must register in advance. Space is limited, so please do not request a paper unless you plan to attend.

Register and Request Paper

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