New plan: - Withdraw from my university in the US - Finish my bachelor here in Germany (3-4 semesters) - Master's here in English (or European Literatures) - Doctorate here in English - English professor somewhere in the German-speaking world, with focus on theatre from a literary/historical perspective I haven't 100% processed this? But I withdrew my remaining credit balance from the American uni, and I've worked out finances for the next 2 years at least. I think I'm pretty excited, guys. ---- New favorite idiom: das Leben ist kein Ponyhof (pronounced in Baden "s Läbe isch kei Ponyhof") Life isn't a pony farm :)
Lif isn’t a pony farm
I’m not sure what this sentiment means, but I love it. I resolve to use this phrase today in normal conversation.
Sounds like you got this. Hope it all works out for you. What made you decide to pursue a long-ass academic career in Germany? "Das Leben ist kein Wunschkonzert". I like that phrase a lot.I haven't 100% processed this? But I withdrew my remaining credit balance from the American uni, and I've worked out finances for the next 2 years at least.
das Leben ist kein Ponyhof
Hard to explain. Discussing texts, historical currents, writing styles--really picking them apart, and working together to produce a better understanding--with people who also really care: that's fun for me. Spending two hours picking apart Heiner Müllers Hamletmaschine, a text of about 10 pages, then going home to write about it is super exciting. Doing the thing because it's interesting, not because it's classically "productive" :)
Academia in the US is dying-- especially the humanities. Not to mention, as a language professor in the US, you have to spend about 40% of your time teaching beginning language classes to people who are only there to fulfil a requirement. Here, those classes are in Gymnasium (high school, sort of). That means professors teach the actual intellectual parts. Also America is generally suffocating :P