Staff
Dr. Franziska Bomski
Assistant Director
is a literary scholar whose work focuses on the intersection of literature and science. She earned a PhD from the University of Freiburg with a dissertation on mathematics in the thought and poetry of Novalis, which was published by De Gruyter as Die Mathematik im Denken und Dichten von Novalis in 2014. She has also written on the history of German literary scholarship, with a particular emphasis on the Nazi era, and on various themes in the works of Robert Musil, Christa Wolf, and Dietmar Dath. She has held teaching positions at Goethe University Frankfurt, Yale University, and Beihang University, and she was a Volkswagen Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at the Washington University in St. Louis. From 2012 to 2018 she served as the research coordinator at the Klassik Stiftung Weimar. She joined the Einstein Forum in 2018.
Homepage: franziskabomski.de
Dominic Bonfiglio
Project Assistant
Dominic Bonfiglio studied philosophy and art history at the Johns Hopkins University and at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, where he received the master's thesis prize of the Carl-und-Max-Schneider-Stiftung. In addition to his work at the Einstein Forum, he translates books into English, most recently Jan Philipp Reemtsma's Trust and Violence (2012).
Dr. Amber Carpenter
Academic staff
Dr. Matthias Kroß †
Academic Staff
Born 1953. He is researcher at the Einstein Forum since 1995. Matthias Kross studied history, political science, and philosophy in Marburg, Bremen, and Berlin. He then worked as a high school professor and as a freelancing journalist, translator and essayist. In 1993, he received his doctorate at the Free University of Berlin with a dissertation on Klarheit als Selbstzweck. Ludwig Wittgenstein über Philosophie, Religion, Ethik und Gewißheit. He is board member of the literaturWERKstatt (Berlin) and Councilor of the Institut für Kulturforschung Heidelberg, and Councillor of The Tagore Einstein Council at the Visvra Bharati University, (Santiniketan/Bengal, India). He is teaching at the University of Potsdam (Germany). His research interests focus on the philosophy of logic and language and on the cultural and intellectual history of the 19th and 20th century. He has written extensively on the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein. Recent publications: (editor): „Ein Netz von Normen“. Ludwig Wittgenstein und die Mathematik (2007); (with G. Abel und M. Nedo): Ludwig Wittgenstein. Ingenieur – Philosoph – Künstler (2007); (with Susan Neiman): Zum Glück (2004); (with U. Arnswald and J. Kertscher): Wittgenstein und die Metapher (2003); (with H. J. Schneider): Mit Sprache spielen: Die Ordnungen und das Offene nach Wittgenstein (1999). Since 2006, he is series-editor of Wittgensteiniana.
Katharina Löw
Teamassistentin
Nach einer Ausbildung und Arbeit im Handwerk als Damenschneiderin, folgte ein Studium in Philosophie und Geschichte an der Freien Universität Berlin.
Andreas Schulz
Library/Webmaster
Andreas Schulz studied political science and sociology at the Phillips-Universität Marburg/Lahn and the University Hamburg and Scientific-Documentarist/Information Specialist at the Institut für Information und Dokumentation, Potsdam.
Dr. Benjamin Zachariah
Academic Staff
Benjamin Zachariah read history at Presidency College, Calcutta, and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he completed a PhD in history in the last year of the 20th century. He taught for several years at Sheffield University in the UK, before moving to Germany, where among other things he was Senior Research Fellow at the Karl Jaspers Centre for Advanced Transcultural Studies, Heidelberg University; at the DFG Leibniz Research Group “The Contemporary History of Historiography” at Trier University; and at the Leibniz-Institut für Bildungsmedien/Georg Eckert Institut in Braunschweig. His current research interests include historical thinking in public arguments, historiography and historical theory, the movements of ideas in the twentieth century, international revolutionary networks, and global fascism. He is the author of Nehru (2004), Developing India: an Intellectual and Social History, c. 1930–1950 (2005; 2nd ed. 2012), Playing the Nation Game: the Ambiguities of Nationalism in India (2011; 2nd ed. 2016; revised edition Nation Games 2020), and After the Last Post: the Lives of Indian Historiography in India (2019). He is co-editor of The Internationalist Moment: South Asia, Worlds and World Views 1917–1939 (2015), and of What’s Left of Marxism: Historiography and the Possibility of Thinking with Marxian Themes and Concepts (2020).
Goor Zankl
Management
studierte in Hamburg an der Hochschule für Musik und Theater Kultur- und Medienmanagement. Bevor er ans Einstein Forum kam, war er als Produktions-Manager am KW Institute und der berlin biennial for contemporary art in Berlin tätig.