Dolores Sabaté Planes (Universidad de Santiago de Compostela): Konstellationen der populären naturalistischen Literatur bei Erna Pinner (1890–1987) und Julian Huxley (1887–1975) (25 April 2023)
Alexander Regier (Rice University): Origins and Afterlives of Robinson Kreutznaer: Anglo-German London in the Eighteenth Century (14 March 2023)
Jan Rüger (Birkbeck, University of London): Geht nach England: Hamburg and the Napoleonic Wars (21 February 2023)
Matthew Potter (Northumbria University): German Renaissance art and the British historical imagination: research and representations from the nineteenth century (31 January 2023)
Peter Sprengel (Freie Universität Berlin): Kulturmission und Entsagung oder Rekonstruktion einer Briefliebe: Karl August Varnhagen und Charlotte Williams Wynn (13 December 2022)
Karina Urbach (School of Advanced Study, University of London): Alice’s Book. How the Nazis Stole My Grandmother’s Cookbook (22 November 2022)
Sinclair McKay (London/The Dresden Trust): Dresden and the Landscape of Remembrance (18 October 2022)
Miranda Stanyon (University of Melbourne): Divided by a common tongue? Hoffmann and De Quincey on a European smash-hit aria (17 May 2022)
Charmian Brinson (Imperial College London): Working for the War Effort: Enemy Aliens in British Propaganda during the Second World War (22 March 2022)
William Donahue (University of Notre Dame): Dresden – a Matter of Conscience (15 February 2022)
John Guthrie (University of Cambridge): Johann Jacob Bodmer’s translation of Milton’s “Paradise Lost” (18 January 2022)
Heike Zech (Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nürnberg): Anglo-German museum cultures: places. people. perspectives (7 December 2021)
John Kampfner (Berlin/London): The New German Government - A British Perspective on its international challenges (23 November 2021)
Peter J. Verovšek (The University of Sheffield): Position of Intellectuals in Britain and Germany (1 June 2021)
Maike Oergel (University of Nottingham): Britain, Germany and Brexit: The Legacy of the 19th-century ‘Germanic’ (9 March 2021)
Andrew Hines (Thyssen Fellow at the CAGCR/QMUL and SOAS): Two Grenzen of Misunderstanding. Reflections on a Phenomenon at the Heart of Current Anglo-German Cultural Relations (16 February 2021)
Philip Oltermann (The Guardian, London/Berlin): Inverting the inverted Pyramid. Writing about Germany as an Anglo-German ‘foreign’ correspondent (9 February 2021)
Lars Iyer (Newcastle University): Nietzsche, Music and the ‘Burbs' (1 December 2020)