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6:30 PM, ET

To Chemnitz and Back Again

Reading & Conversation|Kathryn Scanlan & Kate Zambreno on the European Capital of Culture

  • Goethe-Institut New York, New York, NY

  • Language English
  • Price Free

Blick über den Sonnenberg © Ernesto Uhlmann

Blick über den Sonnenberg © Ernesto Uhlmann

In a joint initiative between the European Capital of Culture Chemnitz 2025, the "international literature festival berlin", and the Goethe-Institut New York, American author Kathryn Scanlan was invited to participate in the two-month "EXI(S)T - Literature Residency" in Chemnitz this fall. Upon her return to the United States in early November, Kathryn will sit down with novelist and critic Kate Zambreno to reflect on her experiences in Germany and consider the question of how Chemnitz can be reinterpreted through a transatlantic lens.

Kathryn Scanlan is considered one of the most independent voices in contemporary US literature. In her work Kick the Latch (New Directions, 2022), she tells of the life of a horse trainer from the Midwest and the harsh world of racetracks and horse betting. Her texts are characterized by a documentary narrative style and a great closeness to the lives of the American working class. They are often set in the cities of the Midwest, industrial places that have been facing the challenges of deindustrialization for several decades. Chemnitz, which has always been an industrial and working-class city, also shares this history and present of transformation.

The invitation to Chemnitz is a tribute to Stefan Heym, one of the most important German-language writers and son of the city of Chemnitz. Following oppression and persecution under National Socialism, he fled to the USA via Czechoslovakia to study there. He later returned from the United States to war-torn Germany and became one of the critical public intellectuals of the late GDR. The stay is not only a reflection on transatlantic relations, but also builds a bridge between past and present, as both authors deal with the reality of workers' lives against the backdrop of social upheaval.

The event was organized in cooperation with the European Capital of Culture Chemnitz 2025 and the International Literature Festival Berlin.

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Join us at Syndicated Bar & Theater in Bushwick on November 4, as our partner, 1014, presents a screening of the 2025 documentary, Go, Clara, Go. The film traces the development of an independent art scene in East Germany during the 1970s and 1980s, focusing on the Clara Mosch artist collective and the Galerie Oben in Chemnitz (formerly Karl-Marx-Stadt). For more information & to register, visit Go Clara Go: Challenges for Art & Independent Expression in former East Germany.
 

Panelists

Kathryn Scanlan

Kathryn Scanlan is the author of Aug 9—Fog, The Dominant Animal, and Kick the Latch. She is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize, the Iowa Review Award, the Gordon Burn Prize, the Windham-Campbell Prize for Fiction and a Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as fellowships from MacDowell and the Jan Michalski Foundation. Her work has recently appeared or is forthcoming in exhibition catalogs for artists including Ed Atkins, Robert Therrien, Sam Contis and Mary Ellen Carrol, and she is a regular contributor to the literary journal NOON, edited by Diane Williams.
 

Kate Zambreno

Kate Zambreno is the author of many books, most recently Animal Stories, part of Transit's Undelivered Lecture Series, and Tone, a work of collaborative criticism with Sofia Samatar (Columbia University Press). Their books are translated into the German and published by AKI Verlag, most recently The Light Room (Der helle Raum), translated by Eva Bonne, and Drifts (Drift), translated by Dorothee Elmiger. Two novels, Foam and Performance Art, are forthcoming from Semiotext(e). They are a doctoral candidate in Performance Studies at NYU, thinking through duration. 
 

  • Chemnitz European Capital of Culture 2025
  • internationales literaturfestival berlin 2025