Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors’ Preface
- Eclectic Dichotomies in K. P. Moritz's Aesthetic, Pedagogical, and Therapeutic Worlds
- Sturm und Drang Comedy and the Enlightenment Tradition
- Heaven Help Us! Journals! Calendars!: Goethe and Schiller's Xenien as Circulatory Intervention
- Between Nanjing and Weimar: Goethe's Metaphysical Correspondences
- Projection and Concealment: Goethe's Introduction of the Mask to the Weimar Stage
- Embarrassment and Individual Identity in Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften
- The Daisy Oracle: A New Gretchenfrage in Goethe’s Faust
- Goethes Der Zauberflöte zweyter Theil als Bruch: Zur Semantik des Zauberbegriffs im ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert
- “Ächt antike Denkmale”?: Goethe and the Hemsterhuis Gem Collection
- Bestseller und Erlebniskultur: Neue medienästhetische Ansätze bei Gisbert Ter-Nedden und Robert Vellusig verdeutlicht an Romanadaptionen von Franz von Heufeld
- Papierdenken: Blasche, Fröbel, and the Lessons of Nineteenth-Century Paper Modeling
- The Men Who Knew Too Much: Reading Goethe’s “Erlkönig” in Light of Hitchcock
- Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
- Instrument or Inspiration? Commemorating the 1949 Goethe Year in Argentina
- Media Inventories of the Nineteenth Century: A Report from Two Workshops
- Forum: (New) Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Medical Humanities and the Eighteenth Century
- Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
- Three Observations and Three Possible Directions: Musical and Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Lessing and Kotzebue: A Black Studies Approach to Reading the Eighteenth Century
- Law and Literature: Codes as Colonizing Texts and Legal Ideas in Anthropocene Works
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Migrant? or Debunking the Myth of 1955
- “Goethe Boom” Films: Bildung Reloaded
- Book Reviews
Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors’ Preface
- Eclectic Dichotomies in K. P. Moritz's Aesthetic, Pedagogical, and Therapeutic Worlds
- Sturm und Drang Comedy and the Enlightenment Tradition
- Heaven Help Us! Journals! Calendars!: Goethe and Schiller's Xenien as Circulatory Intervention
- Between Nanjing and Weimar: Goethe's Metaphysical Correspondences
- Projection and Concealment: Goethe's Introduction of the Mask to the Weimar Stage
- Embarrassment and Individual Identity in Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften
- The Daisy Oracle: A New Gretchenfrage in Goethe’s Faust
- Goethes Der Zauberflöte zweyter Theil als Bruch: Zur Semantik des Zauberbegriffs im ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert
- “Ächt antike Denkmale”?: Goethe and the Hemsterhuis Gem Collection
- Bestseller und Erlebniskultur: Neue medienästhetische Ansätze bei Gisbert Ter-Nedden und Robert Vellusig verdeutlicht an Romanadaptionen von Franz von Heufeld
- Papierdenken: Blasche, Fröbel, and the Lessons of Nineteenth-Century Paper Modeling
- The Men Who Knew Too Much: Reading Goethe’s “Erlkönig” in Light of Hitchcock
- Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
- Instrument or Inspiration? Commemorating the 1949 Goethe Year in Argentina
- Media Inventories of the Nineteenth Century: A Report from Two Workshops
- Forum: (New) Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Medical Humanities and the Eighteenth Century
- Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
- Three Observations and Three Possible Directions: Musical and Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Lessing and Kotzebue: A Black Studies Approach to Reading the Eighteenth Century
- Law and Literature: Codes as Colonizing Texts and Legal Ideas in Anthropocene Works
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Migrant? or Debunking the Myth of 1955
- “Goethe Boom” Films: Bildung Reloaded
- Book Reviews
Summary
THE FORUM TOPIC “(New) Directions” is an opportunity to draw attention to the need to integrate disability studies more into Goethe scholarship and research on eighteenth-century German literature. However, going in a new direction within the discipline should not only mean an impulse for discussion; it should have a transformative impact that causes positive changes in the place where the discipline is housed, namely, at the university itself. My thoughts on this new direction therefore play out against the need for and move toward broader, more inclusive perspectives in the field of German studies and its institutional frameworks. Admittedly, I reflect on this topic from the distinct perspective of German in the United Kingdom.
As German studies expands to explore wider and newer fields, academics are using the many opportunities available to openly and publicly reflect on this transformation, for example, via blogs, social media, and in new spaces in academic journals, such as the Forum section of the Goethe Yearbook. In such spaces, amplifying the voices of those with protected characteristics (in the UK, the Equality Act 2010 lists these as age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, and sexual orientation) and reflecting on positionality is also part of this new approach to diversifying both research and the curriculum. Furthermore, as with other “expanding” German studies pathways (e.g., gender and race) that address underrepresentation, a more emphatic focus on disability should be intersectional and can also have a transformative and inclusive impact on university curricula, pedagogy, assessment, and course design.
Disability studies and literary disability studies scholars are often agents of change and academic activists. As such, they are sensitive to the real-world relevance of their research focus. Whether identifying as disabled, not disclosing, or nondisabled allies and advocates, they often bring a commitment to challenging prejudice, stigma, injustice, and bias in relation to disability, to supporting disability pride and visibility, and to amplifying the voices of disabled people. These individuals can actively bring about institutional change by creating opportunities for disabled people (or people with disabilities) to teach and conduct research, and by educating the next generation of students to use disability theory for literary study and to be knowledgeable about inclusive terms and ableist structures.
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- Goethe Yearbook 28 , pp. 307 - 314Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021