Winfried Fluck
Winfried Fluck studied German, English and American literature at
Freie Universität Berlin,
Harvard University and the
University of California, Berkeley. In 1972, he got his doctoral degree from Freie Universität Berlin with a dissertation on aesthetic premises in the literary criticism of Mark Twain’s
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. For his
Habilitation, the European qualification for a professorship, he wrote a study on American realism as a form of “staged reality” ''(Inszenierte Wirklichkeit)''. After visiting scholarships at Harvard and Yale University, he got his first appointment as a professor at the University of Constance in Germany before he became Professor and Chair of North American Culture at the
John F. Kennedy-Institute for North American Studies at Freie Universität Berlin. Winfried Fluck taught as a guest professor at
Princeton University and the
Universidad Autonoma Barcelona, and he was a research fellow at the National Humanities Center in North Carolina, the Advanced Studies Center of the
Rockefeller Foundation in Bellagio, and the Internationales Kulturwissenschaftliches Zentrum in Vienna. From 2005-2008, he was chair of the Research Reviewing Committee of the German Research Council on the humanities. He is a founding member of the
Graduate School of North American Studies at Freie Universität Berlin, funded by the
German Universities Excellence Initiative, and is directing it together with Ulla Haselstein. He is also co-director of the
Futures of American Studies Institute at
Dartmouth College established and directed by
Donald E. Pease.
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