Skip to main content
GSA logo Return to Homepage

Login

Register

Main navigation

  • Home
  • about GSA
    • executive board
    • executive council
    • committees
    • volunteer
    • policies and documents
    • FAQ
    • support the GSA
    • contact us
  • member services
    • my membership
    • join GSA
    • conference registration
    • our institutional members
    • elections
    • GSR online
    • FAQ
  • news
    • news archive
  • publications
    • german studies review
    • spektrum
    • GSA newsletter
  • grants & prizes
    • berlin program
    • GSA conference community fund
    • travel grants
    • barclay book prize
    • DAAD/GSA book prize
    • GSA article prize
    • radomír luža prize
    • milton book prize
    • graduate student essay prize
    • de gruyter brill / GSA dissertation prize
  • conference
    • current conference
    • past conferences
    • future conferences
  • resources
    • resources for german studies
    • dissertations in german studies
    • climate emergency report
    • media
    • interdisciplinary networks
    • ombuds
    • conduct and harassment committee members
Menu

GSA Distinguished Lecture, July 6, 2022 4-6pm CEDT (Freie Universität Berlin)

GSA Distinguished Lecture, "Normality as a Serious Matter and True Joy"
Dr. Margaret E. Menninger (Texas State University/GSA)
(Registration deadline July 1)

What can the nineteenth century have to say about what is normal in the twenty-first? What is normal in the first place; how will we know when we have returned there? Or, perhaps more aptly put, how does society arrive at consensus about what constitutes “normal?” Remember, normality, too, has a history. What we now perceive as normal has not always been so, as the histories of our now-familiar institutions of high culture can show. There was a time when the public museum did not exist, and it was by no means normal to visit a city and spend time in a building dedicated to art or archaeology. These institutions and their histories also remind us that we will know when normal has returned or been established because it will feel right; it will have an emotional component. Indeed, perhaps finding joy is the best first step back, and art culture is a time-tested pathway. As museums, concert houses, and other cultural nexus points reopen around the globe, we can understand how the arts establish the parameters for social normality.
Date & Location: Wednesday, July 6, 2022, 4–6 PM, FU Berlin, Ehrenbergstr. 26/28, 14195 Berlin
Language/s: The lecture will be held in English; the discussion in English and German
Registration: Please send an email to bprogram[AT]zedat.fu-berlin.de by July 1

[[{"fid":"185","view_mode":"wysiwyg","fields":{"format":"wysiwyg","alignment":"center","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"GSA Distinguished Lecture Banner Image","field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":"GSA Distinguished Lecture"},"type":"media","field_deltas":{"1":{"format":"wysiwyg","alignment":"center","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":"GSA Distinguished Lecture Banner Image","field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":"GSA Distinguished Lecture"}},"attributes":{"alt":"GSA Distinguished Lecture Banner Image","title":"GSA Distinguished Lecture","style":"height: 541px; width: 1000px;","class":"media-element file-wysiwyg media-wysiwyg-align-center","data-delta":"1"}}]]

Johns Hopkins University Press | ©2003-2025 German Studies Association, all rights reserved. Contact the GSA.