Claudia Lepp

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Claudia Lepp (born June 3, 1965 in Bruchsal ) is a German historian . She heads the Research Center for Contemporary Church History in Munich and is an adjunct professor at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich .

Life

After graduating from Melanchthongymnasium in Bretten , Lepp studied history and German at the Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg from 1984 . She was a scholarship holder of the Graduate Funding of the State of Baden-Württemberg and the PhD funding of the Evangelisches Studienwerk . For her dissertation, completed in 1994, she received the Wolf-Erich-Kellner-Gedächtnisstiftung award for the promotion of scientific work on liberalism. From 1995 to 1997 Lepp completed a legal clerkship for senior library service at the Berlin Senate Department for Science, Research and Culture, from 1997 to 2000 she worked at the Research Center for Contemporary Church History in Munich in the research project “The role of the Protestant Church in divided Germany”. Since June 2000 she has headed the Research Center for Contemporary Church History.

After her habilitation, Lepp taught from 2004 to 2007 as a private lecturer for modern and contemporary history at the Institute for History of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Karlsruhe . In February 2006 she received the Therese von Bayern Prize from the University of Munich for her scientific work. After her re-habilitation, from April 2007 she was a private lecturer for modern and contemporary history at the historical seminar of the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. In May 2014 she was appointed adjunct professor at this university.

Since May 2009 Lepp has been a contributing researcher at the International Research Training Group “Religious Cultures in Europe in the 19th and 20th Centuries” in Munich and since 2012 project leader in the DFG research group “Protestantism in the Ethical Debates of the Federal Republic 1949–1989”.

Lepp is married to the historian Edgar Wolfrum .

Fonts (selection)

Monographs

  • Protestant-liberal departure into the modern age. The German Protestant Association at the time of the founding of the Empire and the Kulturkampf. Kaiser, Gütersloher Verl.-Haus, Gütersloh 1996 (= Religious Cultures of Modern Age , Vol. 3), ISBN 978-3-579-02602-2 (also: Phil. Diss. University of Freiburg, 1994).
  • Taboo of unity? The East-West Community of Protestant Christians and the division of Germany (1945–1969). Vandenhoeck u. Ruprecht, Göttingen 2004, ISBN 978-3-525-55743-3 .
  • Paths to the GDR. West-east relocations in the church area before the wall was built. Wallstein, Göttingen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8353-1735-2 .

Edited works

  • Together with Barbara Danckwortt: From Borders and Exclusion - Interdisciplinary contributions on the topics of migration, minorities and xenophobia. Marburg 1997.
  • Together with Kurt Nowak : Evangelical Church in Divided Germany (1949–1989). Göttingen 2001.
  • Together with Siegfried Hermle and Harry Oelke: Upheavals. German Protestantism and the social movements in the 1960s and 70s. 2nd edition Göttingen 2012.
  • Together with Klaus Fitschen , Siegfried Hermle, Katharina Kunter and Antje Roggenkamp: The politicization of Protestantism. Developments in the Federal Republic of Germany during the 1960s and 70s. Göttingen 2011.
  • Together with Ulrike Haerendel: Confessing Church and Unjust State . Bad Homburg 2015.
  • Together with Harry Oelke and Detlef Pollack : Religion and lifestyle in the upheaval of the long 1960s. Göttingen 2016.

Editorships

  • Together with Horst Gorski , Klaus-Dieter Kaiser and Harry Oelke : Kirchliches Jahrbuch for the Evangelical Church in Germany 131, 2004/05 ff.
  • Together with Harry Oelke: Mitteilungen zur Kirchliche Zeitgeschichte 1, 2007 ff.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ List of all winners of the Wolf-Erich-Kellner Memorial Foundation Prize. Retrieved June 5, 2018 .
  2. ^ Research Center for Contemporary Church History - Contemporary Church History. Retrieved June 5, 2018 .
  3. ^ List of all winners of the Therese von Bayern Prize. Retrieved June 5, 2018 .
  4. ^ Members - Religious Cultures in Europe in the 19th and 20th Centuries - LMU Munich. Retrieved June 5, 2018 .
  5. ↑ List of members of the DFG research group 1765. Retrieved on June 5, 2018 .

Web links