New German Critique
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New German Critique (acronym NGC) is a contemporary scholarly journal in German studies. It is associated with the Department of German Studies at Cornell University. It describes itself as "the leading journal of German studies." [1] If further says, it "covers twentieth century political and social theory, philosophy, literature, film, media and art, reading cultural texts in the light of current theoretical debates." [2]
It is a JSTOR journal.
[edit] Staff
- Executive Editors: David Bathrick (Ithaca), Andreas Huyssen (New York), Anson Rabinbach (Princeton).
- Editorial Advisory Board: Miriam Hansen (Chicago), Peter U. Hohendahl (Ithaca), Biddy Martin (Ithaca), Eric Rentschler (Cambridge), Jack Zipes (Minneapolis).
- Contributing Editors: Leslie Adelson (Ithaca), Ulrich Baer (New York), Susan Buck-Morss (Ithaca), Amir Eshel (Stanford), Gerd Gemünden (Hanover), Peter Gordon (Cambridge, Mass.), Atina Grossman (New York), Isabel Hull (Ithaca), Anton Kaes (Berkeley), David Levin (Chicago), Andrei Markovits (Ann Arbor), Michael Richardson (Ithaca), Eric Santner (Chicago), James Steakley (Madison), Michael Steinberg (Ithaca), Katie Trumpener (New Haven).
- Managing Editor: Andrew Oppenheimer (Ithaca).
- Graphics Editor: Brendan K. Bathrick (New York).