Events

Cassandra Painter, "The Life and Afterlife of Anna Katharina Emmerick: Reimagining Catholicism in Modern Germany"

Cassandra Painter

Cassandra Painter, a Ph.D. Candidate in History at Vanderbilt University, presents on her research project, "The Life and Afterlife of Anna Katharina Emmerick: Reimagining Catholicism in Modern Germany," to an interdisciplinary group of scholars, artists, and scientists comprised of fellows, guest faculty and students.
 

Her research focuses on the religious and cultural history of modern Germany. She is particularly interested in lived religion in the modern world, in the uses of culture to express identity, and the ways in which faith traditions evolve and adapt over time and space. Her dissertation examines the life and subsequent cult of veneration of stigmatic and visionary Anna Katharina Emmerick (1774-1824), using her as a recurring touchstone in an examination of how German Catholics created meaning and built community in modern Germany; who was able to participate in this process; and how Catholics’ understanding of themselves, their faith, and their place in Germany evolved over time. Ms. Painter has presented her research at the German Historical Institute’s Transatlantic Doctoral Seminar, the German Studies Association, and the American Historical Association.
 

Anna Katharina Emmerick Saint Visionary

A William J. Fulbright Scholarship funded Ms. Painter’s archival research in Germany in 2013-2014, and she was also offered funding from the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). She is a Jacob K. Javits Fellow, and a recipient of the University of Rochester’s Meyer Award for Excellence in Teaching Assistantship. Grants from the DAAD and the Language School of Middlebury College have supported her training in German and Italian respectively. A Heritage Scholar Award, a full-tuition scholarship awarded based on academic merit, funded her undergraduate degree at the College of Idaho.