I announce with pleasure that Karin Schutjer will take over as editor of our monograph series effective January 1, 2016. Until then I continue to welcome proposals as always.
Jane BrownUniversity of Washington
I announce with pleasure that Karin Schutjer will take over as editor of our monograph series effective January 1, 2016. Until then I continue to welcome proposals as always.
Jane BrownUniversity of Washington
“Das Gebildete wird sogleich wieder umgebildet, und wir haben uns, wenn wir einigermaßen zum lebendigen Anschaun der Natur gelangen wollen, selbst so beweglich und bildsam zu erhalten, nach dem Beispiele mit dem sie uns vorgeht.”Over the coming months, we will be seeing a number of changes: we will be selecting new officers and a new book series editor; inaugurating a new prize to promote research on Goethean science; and convening a new GSA Seminar on “Science, Nature, and Art.” The following record of the Society’s recent events and activities suggests the challenge of change for our organization should be understood, in true Goethean fashion, as part of a process of transformation that flexibly adapts the past and keeps it moving into the future.
For those who were unable to attend the conference, I would like to begin my summary with two announcements that I made during our Annual Business Meeting in Pittsburgh.Our Essay Prize for 2013 was awarded to Professor Patricia Simpson for her article “Sacred Maternity and Secular Sons: Hölderlin’s Madonna as Muse.” Read Daniel Purdy’s laudatio below. Congratulations on your accomplishment, Patty, and many thanks to Daniel Purdy and the other two judges, Peter Höyng and Gail Hart, for their hours of work.I was also extremely pleased to announce the establishment of a new prize that has been made possible through the generosity of one of our most dedicated and active members, Dr. Elizabeth M. Powers. Further details will be worked out over the coming months, but the Richard Sussman Memorial Prize, named to honor Elizabeth’s late husband, will promote research on Goethe’s scientific writings and activities, including his correspondence and contacts with important figures in the scientific community of his day.Thank you again, Elizabeth. We are touched by your generous support and the trust you have placed in the Society to further knowledge in fields that were very dear to Richard and you.Here is a record of our four days in Pittsburgh last October:
Two people at my own University, whom most will not know, deserve special mention. Thank you Alana (Dunn) and Samantha (Shipeck) for your dedication and skill in making the event happen.With just thirty months now left until the next Atkins Conference, I want to extend my best wishes to Daniel Purdy, who will be organizing our tri-annual gathering in the Fall of 2017. Please mark your calendars. I’m certain your ideas and suggestions will be welcome, as will be your participation. Good luck, Daniel!
We are now in the process of organizing our next election and appointing a successor to Jane Brown as editor of our book series. Let me therefore remind you to make your nominations by April 1.
Over the coming years, I would like our Society to find ways to cooperate with Goethe institutions abroad on a more regular basis. I will therefore renew conversations at the end of May with members of the Vorstand of the Goethe-Gesellschaft in Weimar. At the top of my list of topics will be joint membership options for our societies and jointly organized Studienaufenhalte in Weimar/Jena. Following my stay in Weimar, I will be at the Freies Deutsches Hochstift in Frankfurt, where I will explore additional possibilities for cooperation, including jointly sponsored conferences and research projects.To assist me in these exploratory conversations, I would ask interested members to send me their ideas and comments. And if you have professional contacts with colleagues who are active in organizations abroad, please let me know.I will update you on these conversations in my final column as President next fall, as well as at our Annual Business Meeting, which will take place at the German Studies Association in Washington, D.C. in October.
Clark MuenzerUniversity of Pittsburgh
We are soliciting panel proposals for the next ASECS meeting March 29-April 3, 2016 in Pittsburgh. Please send me a brief topic description. The deadline has been extended until April 1, 2015.If you are going to be at this year’s GSA in Washington, DC, please plan on joining us for our annual business meeting and cash bar, where we’ll be saying a fond farewell to many of our current officers and announcing incoming ones.
Karin SchutjerUniversity of Oklahoma
Romanticism, Origins, and the History of Heredity by Christine Lehleiter is now out. From Bucknell's web site:
At the turn of the eighteenth century, selfhood was understood as a "tabula rasa" to be imprinted in the course of an individual's life. By the middle of the nineteenth-century, however, the individual had become defined as determined by heredity already from birth. Examining novels by Goethe, Jean Paul, and E.T.A. Hoffmann, studies on plant hybridization, treatises on animal breeding, and anatomical collections, Romanticism, Origins, and the History of Heredity delineates how romantic authors imagined the ramifications of emerging notions of heredity for the conceptualization of selfhood. Focusing on three fields of inquiry - inbreeding and incest, cross-breeding and bastardization, evolution and autopoiesis - Christine Lehleiter proposes that the notion of selfhood for which Romanticism has become known was not threatened by considerations of determinism and evolution, but was in fact already a result of these very considerations. Romanticism, Origins and the History of Heredity will be of interest for literary scholars, historians of science, and all readers fascinated by the long durée of subjectivity and evolutionary thought.
Our next book, Pretexts for Writing: German Prefaces around 1800, by Seán Williams, is scheduled to enter production this summer, and additional promising projects are currently being revised.We continue to encourage submissions from our members, their friends, and those who find us in other ways.
Jane K. BrownUniversity of Washington
We are still looking for original contributions to volume 23 and would like to invite submissions on all aspects of eighteenth-century and early nineteenth-century German literature and culture. We are particularly interested in articles written by advanced graduate students and assistant professors, and would like to use this opportunity to encourage them to contact us about potential publications.In addition to our general section, we are planning a special section on “Goethe and the Visual Arts” and welcome contributions on drawings, painting, tableau vivant, sculpture, printmaking, design, and architecture in the long eighteenth century. We are also interested in critical readings of films about Goethe and his contemporaries as well as filmic adaptations of eighteenth-century works.Submissions should reach us by late May, preferably earlier. Manuscript submissions should follow the Chicago Manual of Style and confine themselves to less than 35 pages. For specific questions about scholarly citations, please consult the Yearbook’s style sheet.
Adrian DaubStanford University
Elisabeth KrimmerUniversity of California at Davis