Featuring discussions of cosmopolitanism and deliberative democracy; Raymond Williams’s model of dominant, residual, and emergent cultures; Puritanism and Jeffersonianism; the horizon of expectations and the aesthetics of reception; canonization; ideology; and American Exceptionalism.
Education:
PhD History, European University Institute, Florence, Italy.
MSc Political Science, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
LLB/LLM International law and EU law, University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, France.
Academia Profile:
http://eui.academia.edu/FrankEjbyPoulsen
Research Gate:
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Frank_Poulsen
Languages:
French: Mother tongue
Danish: C2
English: C2
Italian: C1
German: B2-C1
Spanish: A2-B1
Norwegian and Swedish: reading comprehension
Latin: intermediate
RT @EUI_History: 🚨 Are you a Master’s graduate interested in Global and Transnational History?
Apply for our online Summer School!
"Whose… 13 hours ago
RT @JohnErik_H: Really interesting talk, on an under-explored(!) aspect of Locke's thought and career. (Never thought I'd write that there'… 1 day ago
RT @FBGotha: Noch ist Zeit zur Bewerbung um das #Stipendium für literarische Recherchen in der Forschungsbibliothek Gotha 2023.
Deadline i… 2 days ago
RT @hab_wf: #CallforPapers: The "45th International Wolfenbüttel Summer Course on 'Early Modern Visual Data: Organizing Knowledge in Printe… 2 days ago