Oliver Simons
Professor of Germanic Languages
Department of Germanic Languages

Member of the ICLS Undergraduate Committee 2018-2019

Oliver Simons studied German literature, cultural studies, and philosophy at Humboldt-University in Berlin, where he received his Dr. phil. in 2005. His teaching and research interests focus on literature and science, post-colonial studies, the “end” around 1800, and literary theories.

His first book, a comparative study on spatial concepts in philosophy, empirical psychology, art history, and literature around 1900, appeared in 2007: Raumgeschichten. Topographien der Moderne in Philosophie, Wissenschaft und Literatur (Wilhelm Fink Verlag). His second monograph, a book on literary theories, was published in 2009 (Literaturtheorien zur Einführung. Junius Verlag). In addition, he has co-edited essay collections on German colonialism (Francke Verlag 2002), Kafkas Institutionen (Transcript 2007), and Ingeborg Bachmann and the media (Vorwerk 2008). He has contributed essays to such journals as Monatshefte, Germanic Review, German Quarterly, and the Zeitschrift für Germanistik.

Currently, he is preparing a book manuscript tentatively titled Inversions, Folds, and Anamorphosis: A Spatial History of Poststructuralism. By juxtaposing Kant with Foucault, Leibniz with Deleuze, and Descartes with Lacan, this study reconstructs three different intellectual and scientific traditions of spatial thought. In a second book project on The Ends of the Eighteenth Century, he examines how textual endings around 1800 correspond with theories of causality and conclusion. In addition to these projects, he is co-editing The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt, bringing together insights from a variety of disciplines, including law, literature, and political science.

 The Heyman Center for the Humanities, Room B-101
74 Morningside Drive
New York, NY, 10027
  (212) 854-4541
  (212) 854-3099