theology.history

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theologie.geschichte (abbreviation. tg ) is a multilingual, peer-reviewed open access journal for theology and cultural studies.

To the magazine

The magazine was founded in autumn 2005 by Lucia Scherzberg and August Leugers-Scherzberg and has been published annually since 2006 both as an Internet and print edition. The editorial office is located in Saarbrücken . The editorial team was headed by Katharina Peetz from April 1, 2008 to June 30, 2016, Sascha Bayer from August 1 to December 31, 2016, Alexandra Kaiser from January 1 to May 30, 2017, and Andrea since June 1, 2017 Nguyen. Katharina Peetz has been co-editor since October 1, 2017. theologie.geschichte is published with technical support from the Saarland University and State Library .

The journal's scientific advisory board consists of Seth D. Armus, New York, Rainer Bucher , Graz, Emmanuel Faye , Rouen, Manfred Gailus , Berlin, Michael Hüttenhoff , Saarbrücken, Rainer Kampling , Berlin, Katharina von Kellenbach, St. Mary's City , Maryland, Björn Krondorfer, Flagstaff, Arizona, Antonia Leugers , Munich, Martin Leutzsch , Paderborn, Wilfried Loth , Essen, John D'Arcy May, Dublin, Joachim Neander, Krakow, Norbert Reck, Munich, Jörg Seiler, Erfurt.

theologie.geschichte publishes scientific articles, miscommunication (essays, discussion contributions, source texts, conference and project reports, etc.) and reviews. Contributions can be submitted and published in German, English or French. It is also possible to publish monographs, anthologies, dissertations and post-doctoral theses both on the Internet and in book form in the supplement series.

So far, the following have appeared as printed editions:

  • theologie.geschichte 1 (2006) to 2 (2007)
  • Supplement No. 1: Scherzberg, Lucia (ed.), Community Concepts in the 20th Century Between Science and Ideology, 2010
  • Supplement No. 2: Henkelmann, Andreas / Priesching, Nicole (eds.), Resistance? Research Perspectives on the Relationship between Catholicism and National Socialism, 2010
  • Supplement No. 3: Scherzberg, Lucia, Karl Adam and National Socialism, 2011
  • Supplement No. 4: Dahlke, Christian, The Pius Brotherhood and the Second Vatican Council, 2012
  • Supplement No. 5: Scherzberg, Lucia (ed.), “Double Dealing with the Past” and the Singularity of the Holocaust, 2012
  • Supplement No. 6: Neander, Joachim, The German Corpse Factory. The Master Hoax of British Propaganda in the First World War, 2013
  • Supplement No. 7: Leugers, Antonia (ed.), Between Revolutionary Shock and Debate on Guilt. Munich Catholicism and Protestantism in the 20th Century, 2013
  • Supplement No. 8: Leugers-Scherzberg, August H. / Scherzberg, Lucia (ed.), Gender Aspects in Dealing With the Past, 2014
  • Supplement No. 9: Leugers-Scherzberg, August H. / Scherzberg, Lucia (ed.), Discourses on “Form”, “Shape” and “Style” in the 20s and 30s of the 20th century, 2017
  • Working aid No. 1: Leugers, Antonia, Georg Angermaier (1913–1945). A European from Würzburg resisting the Nazi dictatorship, 2010

content

The context in which the journal was created is the efforts to come to terms with the past in German historiography and German Catholic theology since the 1990s and the requirement that the relationship between scientists and academic theory-building and National Socialism should not be seen as a marginal part of history, but as a central category for research the modern history of science to understand. theologie.geschichte makes “coming to terms with the past” the thematic focus. The magazine assumes the following premise: Coming to terms with the past is not a process that can be concluded once and for all, but a new examination of the fundamentals of inhuman ideologies. The efforts to come to terms with the past, which are made in other subjects, must not ignore any discipline. Always ask to what extent results from other disciplines have repercussions on your own subject. In addition, coming to terms with the past cannot be limited to dealing with National Socialism and Germany, but must also include other inhumane ideologies in their influence on the cultural development in the respective countries affected. As a journal for theology and cultural history, theologie.geschichte is a forum for the theological and historical discussion of general cultural developments in recent history. The ideologies of the 20th century drew their impact not least from the implementation of originally religious ideas in secular political concepts. The parallel view of theology and other sciences on cultural-historical phenomena sharpens the view for this.

literature

  • Lucia Scherzberg / August H. Leugers-Scherzberg, Editorial, in: theologie.geschichte 1 (2006), p. 9ff.

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