Angelika Schaser (born 1956) is a German historian.
Life and career
Born in Munich, Schaser studied history, geography and library science in Munich and Berlin. In 1985, she became a research assistant to Ilja Mieck at the Friedrich Meinecke Institute of Freie Universität Berlin. In 1987, she received her doctorate from the FU Berlin with the thesis Josephinian Reforms and Social Change in Transylvania.[1] Her doctoral supervisor was Mathias Bernath. The topic was suggested by Harald Zimmermann. In 1999, she habilitated at the FU Berlin with the thesis Helene Lange and Gertrud Bäumer. A Political Life Community. In 2000, she received the Wolf-Erich-Kellner-Prize for her habilitation thesis.[2] After her habilitation, she was a senior assistant at the Friedrich Meinecke Institute.
Since 2001, Schaser has succeeded Bernd Jürgen Wendt as Professor of New History at the University of Hamburg. Schaser's main areas of research and teaching include religion and society in the 19th century, the German Empire and the Weimar Republic, the history of historiography, self-testimonies of the early modern and modern periods as sources of historical scholarship, and the history of the women's movement in Germany (1865-1933). Through Schaser, the University of Hamburg developed into a recognised centre for women's and gender studies.[3] From 2004 to 2010, Schaser was a member of the DFG research group "Selbstzeugnisse in transkultureller Perspektive" (Self-testimonies in transcultural perspective) based at the FU Berlin; she organised numerous workshops and conferences and published essays.
From October 2006 to September 2007, she was executive director of the Department of History. In this function, Schaser came under public pressure in the "Hamburg Muzzle Affair". Schaser had justified the cancellation of a paid teaching assignment in writing with the fact that the person concerned had shortly before made critical comments on WDR about the situation of lecturers.[5]
Publications (selection)
Monographs
with Gesine Carl: Anders werden? Konversionserzählungen vom 17. Jahrhundert bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg. in collaboration with Christine Schatz. Winkler, Bochum 2016, ISBN978-3-89911-255-9.
Der Arbeitskreis Historische Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung 1990 bis 2015. Wissenschaftliche Professionalisierung im Netzwerk. Hamburg 2015 ISBN978-3-00-050354-2.
Helene Lange und Gertrud Bäumer. Eine politische Lebensgemeinschaft (L’Homme-Schriften. Reihe zur feministischen Geschichtswissenschaft. Vol. 6). 2., durchgesehene und aktualisierte Auflage. Böhlau, Cologne 2010 among others ISBN978-3-412-09100-2 (in the same time: Berlin, Freie Universität, Habilitations-Schrift, 1999).
Frauenbewegung in Deutschland: 1848–1933. WBG, Darmstadt 2006, ISBN3-534-15210-7.
Josephinische Reformen und sozialer Wandel in Siebenbürgen. Die Bedeutung des Konzivilitätsreskriptes für Hermannstadt (Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte des östlichen Europa. Vol. 29). Steiner, Stuttgart 1989, ISBN3-515-05069-8 (in the same time: Berlin, FU, Dissertation, 1986).
Editorships
with Sylvia Schraut, Petra Steymans-Kurz: Erinnern, vergessen, umdeuten? Europäische Frauenbewegungen im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert (Geschichte und Geschlechter. Bd. 73). Campus Verlag, Frankfurt 2019, ISBN978-3-593-51033-0.
with Stefanie Schüler-Springorum: Liberalismus und Emanzipation. In- und Exklusionsprozesse im Kaiserreich und in der Weimarer Republik (Wissenschaftliche Reihe. Vol. 10). Steiner, Stuttgart 2010, ISBN978-3-515-09319-4 (Review).
^Barbara Vogel: Geschichtswissenschaft in Hamburg seit 1970. In Rainer Nicolaysen, Axel Schildt (ed.): 100 Years of Historical Studies in Hamburg (Hamburger Beiträge zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte. Vol. 18). Reimer, Berlin among others 2011, ISBN978-3-496-02838-3, pp. 295–330, here p. 320.