In the media:
Gesa Coordes, Vegetarier im Unabhängigkeitskampf, in: DUZ. Magazin für Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft, no. 3/2022, 18 March 2022, pp. 34–36
Julia Hauser: Demaskiert: Covid-19 und die kulturelle Dimension der Debatten um die Maskenpflicht / Unmasked: Covid-19 and the Cultural Dimensions of the Debate on Mandatory Face Masks, in: Geschichte der Gegenwart, 8 April 2020
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![]() Julia Hauser is a Global History researcher at the University of Kassel. She completed her Habilitation in Modern and Contemporary History in 2022 and served as Associate Professor of Global History and the History of Globalization Processes at Kassel from 2014 to 2021. She earned her PhD from the University of Göttingen in 2012 and teaches on the interconnected histories of Europe, the Middle East, Asia, as well as on modern and contemporary history broadly speaking. Her research focuses on cultural entanglements involving knowledge, food, religion, and gender. Her first book examined German-Protestant missionary activities in Beirut. Her second book explores transnational debates on vegetarianism across Germany, Britain, South Asia, and the United States. She has also co-authored an illustrated global history of plague with artist Sarnath Banerjee. Hauser’s research has taken her to archives and libraries across Europe, the Middle East, South Asia, and the United States, supported by numerous academic grants and fellowships. She has held research affiliations in Kolkata and Delhi and is an alumna of the Arab-German Young Academy of Sciences and Humanities (AGYA). Her current project examines debates on imperial debt across Britain, India, and the Caribbean. Fields of Expertise Global History (19th and 20th century) Entangled history of Germany and the Ottoman Empire Entangled history of Germany, Britain, and India (19th and 20th century) Visual history Key Publications Forthcoming: German Religious Women in Late Ottoman Beirut. Competing Missions. Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2015. |













