Jake Fraser
Associate Professor, German and the Humanities
Reed College
Associate Professor, German and the Humanities
Reed College
I am Associate Professor of German and the Humanities at Reed College, in Portland, Oregon. There, I am also a part of the Program in Comparative Literature, and was founding chair of the College's major program in Film and Media Studies.
I work at the intersections of media history, literature, and philosophy, and have published on a range of topics in these fields. I have also worked as an academic translator and have published several translations (Friedrich Kittler, Bernhard Waldenfels, Anselm Haverkamp).
My dissertation ("Irreversible: Kleist, Kafka, and the Present's Past") offers a window onto the history of time, the emergence of a Copernican Turn in late 18th century regarding the relationship between past and present. Historical ruptures and new media technologies, I argue, produced the insight that the past is a function of the present--and not vice versa.
In my teaching, I have a soft spot for formalist criticism and close reading: the first course that I designed from the ground up was entitled "Erzählanfänge. Problems with Beginning and Beginning with Problems" and taught upper-level undergraduates to analyze literary beginnings, while leading them through a series of canonical examples.
My work and study has been recognized and supported by several institutions, including the Fulbright Commission, the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), the Berlin Program For Advanced German and European Studies at the Freie Universität zu Berlin, the France Chicago Center, the Franke Institute for the Humanities at the University of Chicago and the Nicholson Center for British Studies at the University of Chicago.