Anna Pauder †
In Memoriam, * 29.10.1993, † 18.01.2025
It is with great consternation that we learned of Anna Pauder’s passing. As a doctoral student, lecturer, and research assistant at the Chair of American Studies with a Focus on Diversity Studies at the TU Dresden and as a research assistant of the GenderConceptGroup, but above all as a warm-hearted, exceptionally smart, and committed person, Anna always enriched our academic lives. She shaped our work through her curiosity and creativity, as well as her critical thinking and unique capacity for reflection. We are grateful for the time we shared and remember her with profound sadness.
Curriculum Vitae
2024–2025 | Research Assistant with theGenderConceptGroup at TU Dresden |
2022–2025 | Research Assistant at the Chair of American Studies | Diversity Studies at TU Dresden |
2021–2025 | PhD Candidate, Project: "Serenading Secession: Musical Framing of Confederate Nationalism in Women's Civil War Diaries" |
2021 | Master of Arts in American Studies | TU Dresden |
2018 | Bachelor of Arts in American and German Studies | TU Dresden |
Publications & Talks
Pauder, Anna. "Malevolent Mothers and Distracted Children: Maternity as a Discursive Construct during the Salem Witch Trials." GenderGraduateProjects VI: Lebenswelten, Feministische Diskurse, Narrating Gender, edited by Susanne Schötz et al., 2023, Leipziger Universitätsverlag, pp. 12–33.
Pauder, Anna. "Malevolent Mothers and Distracted Children: Maternity as a Discursive Construct during the Salem Witch Trials." 6. Nachwuchskolloquium zur Geschlechterforschbung, TU Dresden, Dec. 2021.
Research Interests
- Music in American history
- The Antebellum and Civil War South
- Lost Cause narratives and rhetoric
- Femininity as a discursive construct
- Witchcraft discourse in Puritan New England
Memberships
- Organization of American Historians (OAH)
- German Association of American Studies (GAAS)
PhD Project
Musical aptitude was regarded a central ornament of feminine decorum for upper-class women throughout the American Civil War, particularly in the South’s culture of gentility. As such, numerous Confederate women recorded expressive accounts of their musical engagements—whether it be their own music making or commenting on that of others—in their wartime diaries and memoirs. This project studies 60 of those texts, tracing patterns of musical references through the lenses of race, class, gender, and nation. In a textual analysis, it thus examines how elite women from different parts of the Confederacy used the predominantly feminine vocabulary of music-making to position themselves in relation to their own performances of feminine conduct, their status as ladies, their identity as subjects of a new nation, and their pronounced whiteness. Considering the transformative nature of war, the focus on wartime life writing is established to explore women’s musically framed responses at a time when previously ingrained notions began to crumble and lines between prescribed behavioral expressions were blurred. Only somewhat recently have historians begun to engage with the aurality of the past. Just as music had to be deliberately performed to allow for its reception—at a time of widespread musical activity, yet just predating recording technologies—so did these women purposefully reflect on their engagement with the aural aspects of their existence during wartime induced social and cultural upheaval. Thus, this project’s analysis aims not only to grasp the experiential musical dimension of the war as experienced by certain white Confederate women but further to gain an understanding of how they participated in the recalibration and perpetuation of idea(l)s that have persisted beyond their writing, and ultimately, through the height of the Lost Cause narratives, have come to shape how the southern past and its female inhabitants are understood to this day.