Englisches Seminar

Chair Prof. Dr. Michael Butter

Welcome to the Chair of American Literary and Cultural History!

Currently, the chair consists of Prof. Dr. Michael Butter, Marina Pingler and Mara Precoma. For information on the researchers, their teaching, and individual and collaborative projects, please visit their individual websites.

Butter, Michael, Dr., Prof.

Contact

michael.butterspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de
29-77341
Homepage

Room

558
Wilhelmstr. 50 (Brechtbau)

 Office Hours

WiSe 2025/2026: Wednesday, 11-13 h

In person or via Zoom
Please sign up for a time slot via this link

Pingler, Marina, M.A.

Contact

marina.pinglerspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de
29-73297
Homepage

Room

562

Office Hours

Wednesdays, 16 - 17 h
Please sign up for a time slot via this link:
During the break:
per e-mail appointment

Precoma, Mara, M. A.

Contact

mara.precomaspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de
29-76707
Homepage

Room

557
Wilhelmstr. 50 (Brechtbau)

Office Hours

Per e-mail appointment.

Student Assistants

  • Mercedes Albers-Pantin
  • Annika Rübenacke

hiwis.butter@es.uni-tuebingen.de 

Our research and teaching are characterized by 

  • a focus on diachronic developments: We study various aspects of American culture from the colonial period to the present, and we are particularly interested in how history and memory shape contemporary experiences;

  • a focus on the aesthetic dimensions of literary and cultural artefacts: We study how, for example, narrative perspectives, editing techniques, or color schemes shape meaning, and we are particularly interested in the politics of form, in how certain genres or tropes are tied to specific ideological perspectives;

  • a focus on the connections between fictional and factual representations: We study not only fiction, poetry, drama, film, and TV shows, but, among others, also pamphlets, sermons, speeches, podcasts, and online posts, and we are particularly interested in the relations and exchanges between these different media and genres;

  • a focus on interdisciplinary perspectives: For our classes and publication, we draw on research from across the humanities and social sciences, for example, on studies from sociology, political science, or anthropology;

  • and a focus on comparative approaches: We participate in a number of research projects, for example, on conspiracy theories or climate change, in which we collaborate with colleagues who study other regions and countries. This, in turn, helps us to better understand events and developments in the United States.



PhD Dissertations

Current

  • Braune, Anne. Das Bild der Verschwörung – visuelle und fotografische Strategien als angebliche Beweise für bildbasierte Verschwörungstheorien in sozialen Netzwerken (working title, co-supervised with Bernhard Pörksen).
  • Dirkschnieder, Tom. Queer Gaming. 'Creating' LGBT-Representation in Contemporary Video Games (working title).
  • Fuss, Jessica. Making an American Hero: The Heroization of Chesley B. Sullenberger and the Concept of Heroism in Post- 9/11 America (working title).
  • Hammel, Laura-Luise. Komplotte gegen das Kollektiv. Zu Aktualität, Akzeptanz und Einsatz von Verschwörungstheorien im deutschen Rechtspopulismus (working title, co-supervised with Gabriele Abels).
  • Meier, Denise. (Re)Imagining AI, Gender and Femininity on Screen (working title).
  • Nöller, Thomas. Die Sozialfigur Verschwörungstheoretiker*in: Ethnografische Untersuchungen des Verschwörungstheorie-Milieus in Deutschland (working title, co-supervised with Angela Poferl, TU Dortmund).
  • Pingler, Marina. Re-Imagining Climate Futures: Alternative Imaginaries in American Literature and Culture (working title).
  • Precoma, Mara. Everything is Connected: Conspiracy Theories in German-Language Online Environments (working title, co-supervised with Martina Thiele).
  • Raible, Albrecht. Survival of Anticommunism in American Politics during the 1960s & 70s (working title).