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First ScienceCampus Writing-Up Grant Awarded: Markus Diepold

Following a competitive call for applications in summer 2023, the ScienceCampus has awarded three doctoral writing-up grants. Markus Diepold is the first person to take up this opportunity.

The Leibniz ScienceCampus Europe and America is delighted to welcome Markus Diepold as the inaugural doctoral writing-up scholarship holder. He will receive funding for two months to work on the final stages of his dissertation, The Material Culture of European-Indigenous Diplomacy in North America in the 18th Century. He is supervised by Prof. Dr Volker Depkat (UR, American Studies).

Markus Johannes Diepold completed his Master’s degree in German and English/American Studies at the University of Graz in 2019. In his final thesis, supervised by Prof. Silvia Schultermandl, he focused on a sociocultural comparison of the visual politics of abolitionist and lynching photographs in the nineteenth century within the U.S. context, on which he expanded in a 2020 journal article published in INTERACTIONS, which investigated the imagery’s afterlife in the Civil Rights Movement. During his studies, he spent a semester at Willamette University in 2015 and worked as a student assistant to Prof. Klaus Rieser at the Department of American Studies from 2016–2018. Following his studies, he spent a year at Williams College, working as a teaching associate at the Center for Foreign Languages, Literatures & Cultures in the academic year 2019/20.

Currently, he is pursuing a doctorate in American Studies at the University of Regensburg supervised by Prof. Dr. Volker Depkat and is working as a research assistant for the DFG-Project “Entangled Objects? Die materielle Kultur der Diplomatie in transkulturellen Verhandlungsprozessen im 18. Jahrhundert,” as part of the subproject “Teilprojekt 2: Die materielle Kultur in der kolonialen Diplomatie Nordamerikas (1713–1763).” The subproject focuses on the forms, functions, and political semantics of the use of objects in the diplomatic interactions between Indigenous peoples and representatives of the European powers, as well as representatives of the North American colonies, from the end of the Queen Anne’s War (1702-1713) to the so-called French and Indian War (1754-1763). Central to this period is the struggle between French and English colonists to gain control over the North American continent, which in the North-East was strongly influenced by the presence of the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee, a confederacy of five, and from 1722 on, six indigenous nations.

Marcus Diepold is the recipient of a ScienceCampus doctoral writing up grant. In January and February 2024 he will be based at the LSC and working towards completing his dissertation.

CV

Photo courtesy of Markus Diepold

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