From the Editor of the Book Series

lehleiterRomanticism, 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