Profile
Teaching profile
The teaching of Prof. Dr. Karl-Siegbert Rehberg stands for a broad presence of sociological theories and the history of theories. He also represents the following areas of cultural sociology in research and teaching: art, science, religion, etc.
He is also the Academic Director of the application-oriented Master's program "Culture and Management" at theDresden International University (DIU), the continuing education university of the TUD Dresden University of Technology.
Core research areas
History of sociology
Philosophical anthropology and sociology
Sociology of culture
Sociology of the arts (especially art and cultural policy in the GDR)
Social theory
Class sociality
Theory of bourgeois society
Post-socialist transformation processes (especially after German reunification)
Current research projects
Karl-Siegbert Rehberg has been editor of the Arnold Gehlen Complete Edition since 1976. He is currently editing :
Vol. 9: Zeit-Bilder und andere kunstsoziologische Schriften [GA9], funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. Duration: 2010 to 2016.
Coordinator for the editorial work: Hans Schilling, other members of the editorial group: Richard Gross, Nicolas Schilling.
Vol. 5: Urmensch und Spätkultur und andere Schriften zur Instutionenlehre [GA5], funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. Duration: 2010 to 2017.
Coordinator for the editorial work: Hans Schilling, other members of the editing group: Richard Gross, Nicolas Schilling.
Audiovisual source material on German sociology after 1945
in cooperation with Prof. Dr. Joachim Fischer (Dresden) and Prof. Dr. Stephan Moebius (Graz) funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. Duration: 2010 to 2017.
In cooperation with Dr. Ingo Blaich.
Western Art / Eastern Art. Kunstsystem und "Geltungskünste" im geteilten und wiedervereinigten Deutschland zwischen 1945 und 2000 - Speaker of the pilot project with Prof. Dr. Frank Zöllner (Institute for Art History at the University of Leipzig) and the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (Dresden State Art Collections), Galerie Neue Meister. Funded by the Saxon Ministry of Science and Art as part of the "Humanities Research" program. Duration: 2015-2016.