Monika Schwarz-Friesel (born November 28, 1961, in Bensberg) is a German cognitive scientist, professor at Technische Universität Berlin and one of Europe's most distinguished antisemitism researchers according to Marc Neugröschel from the newspaper The Times of Israel.[1] She is often interviewed by media outlets like Haaretz,[2] Der Standard[3] or Der Tagesspiegel[4] on her research on current forms of antisemitism, which often take place on the internet.[5]
Schwarz-Friesel studied German and English philology and psychology at the University of Cologne. In 1990 she received her doctorate in Cologne on the subject of "Cognitive Semantics and Neuropsychological Reality" and completed her habilitation in 1998 on the subject of "Indirect Anaphora in Texts".
Schwarz-Friesel established the approach of critical cognitive linguistics in Germany. From 2000 to 2010 she taught as a university professor for text linguistics and pragmatics at the Institute for German Linguistics at the University of Jena. Since 2010 she has held a professorship at Technische Universität Berlin.[6]
Her research focuses on the interaction of language, cognition and emotion, cognitive semantics and metaphors, and verbal manifestations of current antisemitism.[7]
She advises institutions on current forms of antisemitism, e.g. the platform StopAntisemitismus.de which was established in 2019 by the ZEIT-Stiftung.[8] [9] Also, she is the chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Leo Trepp Foundation.[10]
When the Simon-Wiesenthal-Prize of the Austrian Parliament was established in 2020 by the President of the National Council, Wolfgang Sobotka, she became a member of the expert jury.[11] The Simon-Wiesenthal-Prize is awarded by the National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism for outstanding civic engagement to combat antisemitism and promote Holocaust education.[12]
Monika Schwarz-Friesel is married to the historian Evyatar Friesel.[13]