00:17:48 Marie Thurrold: Welcome, all! Please remember to change the To field within chat to “All panelist and attendees” so all can engage in chat. Where are you joining us from today? 00:18:49 Beth Bradshaw: Austin, Texas 00:18:52 Mary Thomas: Greetings from a rainy Santa Cruz, CA! 00:18:53 Michael Wares: Hi From Fordham University, New York 00:19:22 Caren Nichter: hello from University of Tennessee at Martin 00:20:09 Katie Ashton: Hello from Huston-Tillotson University in Austin, TX! 00:24:15 Marie Thurrold: You can find a full list of Goethe's works here (in a column on the right) http://www.online-literature.com/goethe/ as well as a Biography of Goethe. 00:29:01 Marie Thurrold: More information on Romanticism and the movement: https://www.britannica.com/art/Romanticism 00:29:04 Robert Pike: Good to see you from the other side of the Atlantic, Northern Ireland! 00:34:51 Mark Reid: "The eternal Feminine draws us upward and on" Goethe 00:38:48 Marie Thurrold: If any questions inspired by Prof. Sugrue’s lecture, please feel free to add them to the Q&A panel. We’ll have dialogue and answer questions live in about 5 minutes. 00:41:47 Marie Thurrold: More about Rousseau and the Discourse on the Arts and Science https://thegreatthinkers.org/rousseau/introduction/ 00:48:16 Patience Jackson: I'm sitting here in Sudbury, Massachusetts about 4 miles from the Rude Bridge where the American Revolution began, on April 19, 1776. Werther was published in 1774. IS there a connection? 00:55:19 Marie Thurrold: Hey @Patience Jackson, Can you pop your questions in the Q&A panel and Kristy can ask Prof. Sugrue. 00:58:24 Ariana Kaleta: So, the hippy movment - extended romanticism? But could you re-explain your concept that Dada is an extension of romanticism???? 01:02:14 Ariana Kaleta: heidenroesslein 01:06:51 Dennis Johnson: April 19, 1775 01:15:32 Ariana Kaleta: This was thoroughly enjoyable, thank you for Hosting 01:16:50 Debra Stombres: Thank you! Fascinating lecture. 01:17:31 Marie Thurrold: We hope you enjoyed todays webinar. Keep a look out for the thank you email for the recording and resources! Have a great day all! 01:17:33 Diane Napert: Thank you, this was great! 01:17:48 Mark Reid: Thank you very much.. That was very interesting,. Goethe was a profound genius. Thanks Michael Sugrue and Kristy 01:17:52 James Mc Coy: Thank you! This series is very well done. 01:17:56 Robert Pike: Very interesting, thank you 01:18:03 Catherine Cowser: Yes really enjoyed can't wait for the rest! 01:18:11 Caren Nichter: So interesting! Many thanks! 01:18:18 Suzanne Moore: thank you so much for this series! 01:18:47 Patience Jackson: Thank you! Took my mind back to the first time I read Werther, in German Class about 1962! 01:19:07 Diane Napert: I read it in college!