Markus Hardtmann completed an M.A. in German Literature, Philosophy,
and Psychology at the University of Freiburg im Breisgau and
studied at University College London and the Johns Hopkins
University before coming to Northwestern. His research interests
include critical theory, aesthetics, the philosophy of mathematics,
and German and Comparative Literature from the 18 th century
to the present with a special emphasis on the history of novel.
The Studienstiftung Cusanuswerk supported his studies in Germany,
Great Britain, and the US, and Northwestern University awarded
him a Dissertation Year Fellowship and a fellowship with the
Paris Program in Critical Theory. He is currently completing
a dissertation on logic, language, and literary form in Robert
Musil's
Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften and related writings.
Markus Hardtmann has published a critical examination of the
logical foundations of Niklas Luhmann's systems theory ("Beobachtung
Gottes: Systemtheorie - Theologie - Autologie", Parapluie 11
(2001); reviews of books on Walter Benjamin (MLN 2006) and
on Rousseau and Goethe (Modern Philology 2004); as well as
translations of essays by Peter Fenves on Walter Benjamin (Benjamin-Handbuch,
Metzler 2006) and by Terry Pinkard on Heine, Hegel, and Gans
(Hegelianismus und Saint-Simonismus, mentis 2006).