Gerd Hurm


Gerd Hurm is a German scholar and professor of American studies. Gerd Hurm is the son of the artist Karl Hurm.

Early life

Gerd Hurm grew up in the small village of Weildorf, attended schools in Weildorf and Haigerloch, and graduated from high school in Balingen. From 1980 to 1986 Gerd Hurm studied English, German, and Geography at the University of Freiburg, Germany; as an exchange student he also attended King's College London, Great Britain and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA. He completed his MA in 1986, his PhD in 1989, and his post-doctoral thesis in 1999 at the University of Freiburg.

Career

In 1990 he started teaching in Freiburg. From 1994 to 1995 he was a Fulbright visiting professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA.
Since 2001 he has been a professor of English and American studies at the University of Trier. Together with Professor Wolfgang Klooß he founded the Trier Center for American Studies in 2004, of which he is also the director. He was a visiting professor at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., USA, in autumn 2002 and a Fulbright visiting professor at Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, USA in 2006-2007 and the summer of 2012.
His main areas of research are modern and postmodern American literature, rhetoric and media studies, gender studies, as well as African-American literature and culture. In recent years his focus has been on postwar America. In 2005 he contributed to the exhibition Coolhunters ; in 2007 he co-edited the interdisciplinary essay collection Rebels Without a Cause, to encourage a revaluation of the period. In the summer of 2009 he was co-curator of the exhibition Motorcycle: Beschleunigung und Rebellion? at the European Academy of Fine Arts in Trier.

Publications

Monographs