UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Astrological Imaginary in Early Twentieth-Century German Culture Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1210x15f Author Zahrt, Jennifer Lynn Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California The Astrological Imaginary in Early Twentieth–Century German Culture by Jennifer Lynn Zahrt A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in German and the Designated Emphasis in Film in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Niklaus Largier, Co-Chair Professor Anton Kaes, Co-Chair Professor Jonathan Sheehan Spring 2012 ©2012 Jennifer Lynn Zahrt, All Rights Reserved. Abstract The Astrological Imaginary in Early Twentieth–Century German Culture by Jennifer Lynn Zahrt Doctor of Philosophy in German and the Designated Emphasis in Film University of California, Berkeley Professor Niklaus Largier, Co-Chair Professor Anton Kaes, Co-Chair My dissertation focuses on astrological discourses in early twentieth–century Germany. In four chapters, I examine films, literary texts, and selected academic and intellectual prose that engage astrology and its symbolism as a response to the experience of modernity in Germany. Often this response is couched within the context of a return to early modern German culture, the historical period when astrology last had popular validity. Proceeding from the understanding of astrology as a multiplicity of practices with their own histories, my dissertation analyzes the specific forms of astrological discourse that are taken up in early twentieth–century German culture. In my first chapter I examine the revival of astrology in Germany from the perspective of Oscar A. H. Schmitz (1873–1931), who galvanized a community of astrologers to use the term Erfahrungswissenschaft to promote astrology diagnostically, as an art of discursive subject formation. In my second chapter, I discuss how Paul Wegener’s Golem film cycle both responds to and intensifies the astrological and the occult revivals. As the revivals gain momentum, Wegener explicitly depicts seventeenth-century astrological and occult practices with the intention of generating a “purely filmic” experience. I provide new insight into Wegener’s last Golem film through the film architect Hans Poelzig’s personal investment in both baroque architecture and contemporary astrology. My third chapter explores Aby M. Warburg’s lifelong preoccupation with the investigation of astrological symbolism in art. This pursuit led him to create an institution that has played a pivotal role in the material conditions of possibility for people to study the history of astrology, even today. In my fourth chapter, I investigate the many references to astrological phenomena in Walter Benjamin’s intellectual work. I read his work on mimesis and experience alongside his practice of graphology in order to situate him in the debates brought up in the first chapter on the idea of astrology as an Erfahrungswissenschaft. My dissertation reveals how aspects of astrological discourse— specifically its approaches to issues of legibility and interpretation—constructively informed and shaped the middle brow (Schmitz) and the high brow (Warburg), the cinematic (Wegener) and the literary (Schmitz), the institutional (Warburg) and the philosophical (Benjamin) realms of early twentieth–century German culture. 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS iii CHAPTER 1: Introduction 1 CHAPTER 2: Oscar A. H. Schmitz and Narratives of Astrological Experience 10 CHAPTER 3: Staging Early Modern Magic and Science in Paul Wegener’s Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (1920) 41 CHAPTER 4: Aby M. Warburg, Cultural Institutions, and Celestial Hermeneutics 73 CHAPTER 5: Walter Benjamin, Astrology, and Reading What Was Never Written 101 CONCLUSION 125 BIBLIOGRAPHY 127 i LIST OF FIGURES FIGURE 2.1: Cover of Oscar A. H. Schmitz’s Der Geist der Astrologie (1922)...... 14 FIGURE 2.2: Cover of Elsbeth Ebertin’s Der Mars im Todeshause (1924)............ 39 FIGURE 3.1: Screenshot from Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (1920)............ 56 FIGURE 3.2: Woodcut of the constellation Cygnus................................................. 57 FIGURE 3.3: Screenshot from Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (1920)............ 58 FIGURE 3.4: Screenshot from Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (1920)............ 63 FIGURE 3.5: Screenshot from Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (1920)............. 65 ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Among the many wonderful people I’ve had the pleasure of working with while writing this dissertation, special thanks are due to the following individuals: Andrea Albrecht, Donald Backman, Nicholas Baer, Sarah Bailey-Felsen, Emily Banwell, Christian Blohmann, Jeremy Brett, Steve Choe, Jean Day, Julia Ebeling, Melissa Etzler, Dayton Henderson, Jason Kooiker, Julie Koser, Wendy Lesser, Verónica López, Simone Marx, Kristin Miller, Mari Mordecai, Tobias Schlobach, Margaret Strubel, and Gabriel Trop. Niklaus Largier and Tony Kaes, the co-chairs of my dissertation committee, provided me with a constant source of encouragement, inspiration, and productive intellectual exchange. I am also grateful to Jonathan Sheehan, my outside field member, as well as John L. Heilbron and Jane O. Newman, who offered invaluable feedback and insightful questions on my topic. Institutionally, the Beinecke family graciously provided me critical support during the first four years of my graduate studies under the auspices of their Beinecke Fellowship. Several Max Kade and DAAD fellowships allowed me to spend time in libraries in Berlin, Leipzig, and Wolfenbüttel, and in the archives of the Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek in Berlin. The German department at UC Berkeley was also generous in their grant support of my work. My thanks also extend internationally: In Berlin, during the fall of 2008 I participated in the PhD Network, “Das Wissen der Literatur,” with Joseph Vogl. And in the United Kingdom, at the University of Wales Trinity St. David, I am grateful to Nicholas Campion, Bernadette Brady, Darrelyn Gunzberg, and the many enthusiastic colleagues at the Sophia Centre for Cosmology in Culture. Over the last years of writing this dissertation, my family and friends never waivered in their support. I’d especially like to acknowledge and thank Stephen Gerard Gross and the late Corinne Sinclair Crawford. Both born on the same day, these two souls have filled my life with erudition, humor, and priceless lessons in strength and humility. Above all, this dissertation owes a great debt to Gary David Lorentzen. His intellectual passion directly inspired me to pursue not only German studies, but also the history of astrology. I dedicate this iteration of the work to him. iii For Gary iv CHAPTER 1: Introduction On the cusp of the Great War, in a fleeting scene of the film Der Golem (1914), a twentieth-century scholar struggles to complete his magum opus on medieval magic.1 Writing madly, fighting pangs of hunger, he realizes he can no longer stave off his corporeal needs. As an intertitle reads, “the starving scholar must sell a part of his beloved books in order to complete his cataclysmic new work on medieval black magic and sorcery.”2 In due course, the man sells the grimoire with the instructions for animating the Golem to the antique dealer who has just conveniently acquired the Golem’s clay form. This early filmic episode about a historian of medieval magic tells of the influence of the interest in esotericism and its transmission in Germany before the Great War. Unfortunately the film by German actor and writer Paul Wegener has been lost, and although a few film stills and a few feet of film survive, no images exist that show how this modern scholar of magic appeared on the screen. What has survived is Wegener’s 1920 film, Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam, which sets the action directly in the seventeenth century itself and portrays a Rabbi using astrological magic to bring the Golem to life. The progression—from depicting a modern scholar of medieval magic to depicting an early modern magician practicing astrology—is emblematic of the trend during the Weimar Republic for writers to explore early-modern European practices such as astrology through their literary, filmic, and cultural historical texts. My dissertation contributes to the emerging academic attention being paid to esoteric practices by focusing specifically on astrological discourse in its historical, socio- psychological, and imaginative roles in early twentieth–century German culture.3 In my 1 First Screenplay for the Golem: Paul Wegener with Henrik Galeen, “Golem I Drehbuch,” 1914. Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek, Berlin. NachlassArchiv. Golem file: 4359. Folder 4.4-80/18,1. 2 Ibid., “Der hungernde Gelehrte muss um sein umstürzendes neuartiges Werk über Schwarzkunst und Zauberei des Mittelalters zu vollenden, einen Teil seiner geliebten Bücher verkaufen.” 3 See most importantly the work of Kocku von Stuckrad, especially Locations of Knowledge in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Esoteric Discourse and Western Identities (Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2010), Horoscopes and Public Spheres: Essays on the History of Astrology (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2005), edited with Günther Oestmann, and H. Darrel Rutkin, as well as Polemical Encounters: Esoteric Discourse and Its Others (Leiden: Brill, 2007), edited
Recommended publications
  • Film Front Weimar: Representations of the First World War in German Films from the Weimar Period (1919-1933) Kester, Bernadette

    Film Front Weimar: Representations of the First World War in German Films from the Weimar Period (1919-1933) Kester, Bernadette

    www.ssoar.info Film Front Weimar: Representations of the First World War in German Films from the Weimar Period (1919-1933) Kester, Bernadette Veröffentlichungsversion / Published Version Monographie / monograph Zur Verfügung gestellt in Kooperation mit / provided in cooperation with: OAPEN (Open Access Publishing in European Networks) Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Kester, B. (2002). Film Front Weimar: Representations of the First World War in German Films from the Weimar Period (1919-1933). (Film Culture in Transition). Amsterdam: Amsterdam Univ. Press. https://nbn-resolving.org/ urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-317059 Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Dieser Text wird unter einer CC BY-NC-ND Lizenz This document is made available under a CC BY-NC-ND Licence (Namensnennung-Nicht-kommerziell-Keine Bearbeitung) zur (Attribution-Non Comercial-NoDerivatives). For more Information Verfügung gestellt. Nähere Auskünfte zu den CC-Lizenzen finden see: Sie hier: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.de * pb ‘Film Front Weimar’ 30-10-2002 14:10 Pagina 1 The Weimar Republic is widely regarded as a pre- cursor to the Nazi era and as a period in which jazz, achitecture and expressionist films all contributed to FILM FRONT WEIMAR BERNADETTE KESTER a cultural flourishing. The so-called Golden Twenties FFILMILM FILM however was also a decade in which Germany had to deal with the aftermath of the First World War. Film CULTURE CULTURE Front Weimar shows how Germany tried to reconcile IN TRANSITION IN TRANSITION the horrendous experiences of the war through the war films made between 1919 and 1933.
  • A Selective Study of the Writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler

    A Selective Study of the Writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler

    _________________________________________________________________________Swansea University E-Theses The literary dream in German Central Europe, 1900-1925: A selective study of the writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler. Vrba, Marya How to cite: _________________________________________________________________________ Vrba, Marya (2011) The literary dream in German Central Europe, 1900-1925: A selective study of the writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler.. thesis, Swansea University. http://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42396 Use policy: _________________________________________________________________________ This item is brought to you by Swansea University. Any person downloading material is agreeing to abide by the terms of the repository licence: copies of full text items may be used or reproduced in any format or medium, without prior permission for personal research or study, educational or non-commercial purposes only. The copyright for any work remains with the original author unless otherwise specified. The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holder. Permission for multiple reproductions should be obtained from the original author. Authors are personally responsible for adhering to copyright and publisher restrictions when uploading content to the repository. Please link to the metadata record in the Swansea University repository, Cronfa (link given in the citation reference above.) http://www.swansea.ac.uk/library/researchsupport/ris-support/ The Literary Dream in German Central Europe, 1900-1925 A Selective Study of the Writings of Kafka, Kubin, Meyrink, Musil and Schnitzler Mary a Vrba Thesis submitted to Swansea University in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Modern Languages Swansea University 2011 ProQuest Number: 10798104 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted.
  • Bibliography

    Bibliography

    Bibliography Abram, David. The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-than- Human World. New York: Vintage Books, 1996. Print. Adelt, Leonhard. “Lesabéndio. Ein Asteroiden-Roman.” Rev. of Lesabéndio. Ein Asteroiden-Roman by Paul Scheerbart. Das litterarische Echo. 2 Jan. 1914. 650–52. Über Paul Scheerbart: Ed. Paul Kaltefleiter. Oldenburg 1998. 221–23. Print. Adorno, Theodor and Max Horkheimer. Dialektik der Aufklärung: Philosophische Fragmente. Frankfurt a.M.: Fischer, 2008. Print. Alcock, John. An Enthusiasm for Orchids: Sex and Deception in Plant Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. Print. Alraune. Dir. Henrik Galeen. Perf. Brigitte Helm and Paul Wegener. Ama-Film, 1928. Film. “Alraune.” Rev. of Alraune. Lichtbild-Bühne. Feb. 1928. Filmportal. Web. 12 Aug. 2013. Andriopoulos, Stefan. “Occult Conspiracies: Spirits and Secret Societies in Schiller’s Ghost Seer.” New German Critique; Ngc. (2008): 65. ArticleFirst. Web. 10 Dec. 2014. Arnheim, Rudolf. “Das Blumenwunder (1926)” from Film als Kunst. Presse über den Film “Das Blumenwunder”. Archiv der Deutschen Kinemathek. Print. The Arabian Nights’ Entertainments. Chicago: Rand McNally and Co., 1914. Project Gutenberg. Web. 24 Apr. 2012. Asendorf, Christoph. Batteries of Life: The History of Things and Their Perception in Modernity. Trans. Don Reneau. Weimar and Now: German Cultural Criticism. Ed. Martin Jay and Anton Kaes. Berkeley: U of California P, 1993. Google Books. Web. 22 Jul. 2012. Bakke, Monika. “Art for Plant’s Sake? Questioning Human Imperialism in the Age of Biotech.” Parallax. 18.4 (2012): 9–25. Balázs, Béla. “Tanzdichtungen” Musikblätter der Anbruch. March 1926: 109–112. Internet Archive. Web. 2 Dec. 2013. Balázs, Béla. Der Sichtbare Mensch oder die Kultur des Films.
  • Der Kinematograph (August 1932)

    Der Kinematograph (August 1932)

    Kino vor 20 Jahren U.T. Unter den Linden. Kapellmeister: Richard Seiler. -n. Im Jahre 1922 ii er Buchhalter in dir seldorf eingetretei .otn 27. Juli bis einschließlich 2. August 1912. Musik-Piece Zentrale als Chefbuchhalter be¬ dem Transformator nur entnom¬ 1. De- Hafen von Marseille. rufen. Im Jahre 1926 siedelte men werden, wenn alle Regel¬ £in Städtebild. er mit der Südfilm-Zentrale schlitten von der Hellstellung 2. Matkenscherz. nach München und Anfang 1928 soeben auf die ersten Stufen Drama in zwei Akten. nach Berlin über. gelangt sind, also die Verdunke¬ 3. Die ewig lächelnde Dame. In der Aufsichtsratssitzung lung des Kinos bereits begon¬ Humoristische Szenen. vom 27. September 1928 wurde nen hat. Die Kinopraxis ergibt 4. Union-Woche. ihm Prokura erteilt und in der aber, daß die Regelschlilten Übersicht über die interessantesten aktueller Aufsichtsratssitzung vom 14. No¬ niemals alle gleichzeitig auf der¬ eignisse der Woche. vember 1930 wurde er zum selben Regelstufe stehen, son¬ Direktor-Stellvertreter ernannt. dern je nach dem Stück ein¬ 5. Kirdliche Vaterlandsliebe. Ein patriotisches Gedicht. Calm hat sich in diesen zehn gestellt und während der Spiel¬ Jahren nicht nur innerhalb der dauer zur Lichtveränderung hin- 6. Zigolo und das geheimnisvolle Schloß. Abenteuerliche Komödie. Südfilm eine geachtete und und herbewegt werden. Man wichtige Position erworoen. kann für die Einstellung der Re¬ 7. In Valcamonica. gelschlitten nach erfolgtem Be¬ Bilder aus Oberitalien. ginn der Verdunkelung die Er¬ 8. Moritz als Modernist. tung, Freundschaft und Wer fahrungen zugrunde legen, die Posse. Schätzung gefunden «ich in der Praxis bei Verwen¬ dung von Widerständen ergeben haben. Nicht nur für neue der Anschaffung nicht billiger struktion wurden störende Ge¬ Lichtspieltheater sind die Re¬ als bisherige Widerstände stel¬ räusche in den erwähnten italie¬ Südfilm ihm im Laufe der zehn geltransformatoren bedeutungs¬ len.
  • Caricature, Satire, Comics Image on Cover: 4

    Caricature, Satire, Comics Image on Cover: 4

    Caricature, Satire, Comics Image on cover: 4. (Armenian Satirical Journal, Critical of Ottoman Tur- key) - Yeritsian, A. and A. Atanasian, editors. Խաթաբալա, e.g. Khatabala [Trouble], complete runs for 1907 (nos. 1-50) and 1912 (nos. 1-50). Image on back cover: 6. (Australian Counterculture) - Oz. No. 1 (April 1963) through No. 41 (February 1969) (all published). Berne Penka Rare Books has been serving the needs of librarians, curators and collectors of rare, unusual and scholarly books on art, architecture and related fields for more than 75 years. We stock an ever-changing inventory of difficult to source books, serials, print porolios, photographic albums, maps, guides, trade catalogs, architectural archives and other materials from anquity to contemporary art. For an up-to-date selecon of new and notable acquisions, please visit our blog at www.rectoversoblog.com or contact us to schedule an appointment at your instuon. And if you should you hap- pen to be in Boston, please give us a call or simply drop by the shop. We welcome visitors. Items in catalog subject to prior sale. Please call or email with inquiries. 1. (A Key Jugendstil Periodical) - Meyrink, Gustav, editor. Der Liebe Au- gustin. Vol. I, nos. 1 through 24 (1904) (all published). Vienna: Herausgeg- eben von der Österreichischen Verlags-Anstalt F. & O. Greipel, 1904. A com- plete run (altogether 411 [1] pp., continuous pagination) of the rare and very important Art Nouveau periodical primarily published under the editorial di- rection of Gustav Meyrink, with artistic and literary contributions by many noted international turn-of-the-century cultural figures, profusely illustrated throughout after cartoons, caricatures, and other drawings by Heinrich Zille, Josef Hoffmann, Julius Klinger, Lutz Ehrenberger, Jules Pascin, Koloman Moser, Emil Orlik, and Alfred Kubin, among many others.
  • The Vision of Germany's Rebirth

    The Vision of Germany's Rebirth

    THE VISION OF GERMANY'S REBIRTH IN THE NOVELS OF GUSTAV FRENSSEN, GEORG VON OMPTEDA AND 3AK0B UASSERMANN by PAUL SIMON ADAMS B.A., Yale University, 1966 M.A., University of British Columbia, 1970 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in the Department of German Ue accept this thesis as conforming to the required standard THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA April, 1973 In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the Head of my Department or by his representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of German The University of British Columbia Vancouver 8, Canada Date 2 April 1973 i Abstract Through an examination of the vision of Germany's rebirth in the novels of Gustav Frenssen (1863-1945), Georg von Ompteda (1863-1932), and Jakob Uassermann (1873-1934), this study investigates the social, political and ethical goals of three widely read authors of the Uilhelminian era. The central problem of the novels is defined as the attitude towards the industrialization of Germany after 1870 and the way in uhich this attitude prevented the authors from facing up to the problems of industrial society, thereby contributing to the failure of German democracy and the rise of National Socialism.
  • Albert Von Schrenck-Notzing and Albert Moll1

    Albert Von Schrenck-Notzing and Albert Moll1

    Med. Hist. (2012), vol. 56(2), pp. 255–276. c The Author 2012. Published by Cambridge University Press 2012 doi:10.1017/mdh.2011.36 Policing Epistemic Deviance: Albert von Schrenck-Notzing and Albert Moll1 ANDREAS SOMMER∗ UCL Centre for the History of Psychological Disciplines, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK Abstract: Shortly after the death of Albert von Schrenck-Notzing (1862–1929), the doyen of early twentieth century German para psychology, his former colleague in hypnotism and sexology Albert Moll (1862–1939) published a treatise on the psychology and pathology of parapsychologists, with Schrenck-Notzing serving as a prototype of a scientist suffering from an ‘occult complex’. Moll’s analysis concluded that parapsychologists vouching for the reality of supernormal phenomena, such as telepathy, clairvoyance, telekinesis and materialisations, suffered from a morbid will to believe, which paralysed their critical faculties and made them cover obvious mediumistic fraud. Using Moll’s treatment of Schrenck-Notzing as an historical case study of boundary disputes in science and medicine, this essay traces the career of Schrenck-Notzing as a researcher in hypnotism, sexology and parapsychology; discusses the relationship between Moll and Schrenck-Notzing; and problematises the pathologisation and defamation strategies of deviant epistemologies by authors such as Moll. Keywords: Academic Freedom, Boundary Work, Epistemic Deviance, Hypnotism, Parapsychology, Psychical Research Albert von Schrenck-Notzing: From Psychopathia sexualis to the Materialisation of Dreams Baron Albert von Schrenck-Notzing was born in Oldenburg, Germany, on 18 May 1862. After entering Munich University in 1883 to train as a physician, he studied hypnotism under Hippolyte Bernheim in Nancy, together with Sigmund Freud, in the late 1880s.
  • Images of the Golem in 20Th Century Austrian Literature

    Images of the Golem in 20Th Century Austrian Literature

    HEIMAT'S SENTRY: IMAGES OF THE GOLEM IN 20TH CENTURY AUSTRIAN LITERATURE A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in German By Jason P. Ager, M.A. Washington, DC December 18, 2012 Copyright 2012 by Jason P. Ager All Rights Reserved ii HEIMAT'S SENTRY: IMAGES OF THE GOLEM IN 20TH CENTURY AUSTRIAN LITERATURE Jason P. Ager, M.A. Thesis Advisor: Peter C. Pfeiffer , Ph.D . ABSTRACT In his collection of essays titled Unheimliche Heimat , W.G. Sebald asserts that, "Es ist offenbar immer noch nicht leicht, sich in Österreich zu Hause zu fühlen, insbesondere wenn einem, wie in den letzten Jahren nicht selten, die Unheimlichkeit der Heimat durch das verschiedentliche Auftreten von Wiedergänger und Vergangenheitsgespenstern öfter als lieb ins Bewußtsein gerufen wird" (Sebald 15-16). Sebald's term "Gespenster" may have a quite literal application; it is unheimlich to note, after all, how often the Golem makes unsettling appearances in twentieth-century Austrian-Jewish literature, each time as a protector and guardian of specific communities under threat. These iterations and reinventions of the Golem tradition give credence to Sebald’s description of Heimat as an ambivalent and often conflicted space, even in a relatively homogenous community, because these portrayals of Heimat juxtapose elements of innocence and guilt, safety and threat, logic and irrationality. In the face of the Holocaust's reign of death and annihilation, it seems fitting that Austrian-Jewish writers reanimated a long- standing symbol of strength rooted in religious tradition to counter destruction and find meaning in chaos and unexampled brutality.
  • Der Kinematograph (August 1931)

    Der Kinematograph (August 1931)

    DAS AITESIE IILM FACH BUTT lii VERLAG SCHERL* BERLIN SW68 5. Jahrgang Berlin, den 1. August 1931 Nummer 175 Heros Huyras Ein offener Brief Wir haben vorgestern, ob man Vorauszchlungen 'chon damit man uns nicht durch umfangreiche Neu¬ orwirft, daß wir es an der engagements 'itigen Objektivität fehlen retten will. äßen, die oifiziöse Nachricht Drittens: Interessant er die Übernahme des erosfilm-Verleih in Leipzig zu welchem Prozentsatz durch den zweiten Vorsitzen¬ cie einzelnen Leihverträge den des Reichsverbandes durchschnittlich! getätigt wer¬ Deutscher Lichtspieltheater. den. insbesondere, ob Herrn Huyras, in der Form gebracht, wie sie unser Leip¬ unter fünfunddreißig ziger Korrespondent dem Prozent „Kinemalograph“ übermit¬ vermietet wird und ob in telte. diesem billigen Leihpreis das Wir gehen sicher nicht so sehnsüchtig herbeige¬ fehl, wenn wir annehmen, wünschte Beiprogramm nun daß diese Mitteilungen sozu¬ in so vorbildlichem Maß sagen offiziös ge wesen sind, eingeschlossen so daß wir uns zweifellos er¬ ist, daß hier einmal ein lauben dürfen, im Anschluß Theaterbesitzerverleih vor¬ an diese Bekanntmachangen bildlich wirken könnte. ein paar ganz konkrete Fragen Unsere Neugierde erstreckt an die Heros oder Herrn sich dann viertens wei¬ Huyras zu richten, deren Be¬ ter auf die Tatsache, oh die antwortung zweifellos zur Zusammenarbeit mit der Ge¬ Klärung der Situation ganz nossenschaft der mitteldeut¬ ■ heblich beitragen wird. schen Lichlspieitheaterbesit- * zer außerdem in Theaterbesitzern gemacht Wir fragen das nicht, weil einer zwangsweisen Ver¬ Erstens: Die Firma worden sind? uns diese Abmachungen von pflichtung Huyras — um eine Wendung Zweitens: Erfolgt diese seiten der Heros nicht ge¬ >m offiziösen Kommunique zur Abnahme aller Heros¬ Erfüllung der bereits bezahl¬ fallen, sondern wir wünschen zu übernehmen — über- filme besteht.
  • Jewish Studies 2012 Catalog Wayne State University Press 2012 Jewish S Tudies Catalog

    Wayne State Univer S i t y P r e ss Jewish studies 2012 Catalog wayne state university Press 2012 Jewish s tudies Catalog table of Contents new titles . 1–2 european history . 3–6 american history . 7–9 Jewish history . 10–11 holocaust studies . 12 –14 israeli and Middle east studies . 15–17 Jewish life and tradition . 18–20 Music and Performance . 21–22 Jewish thought . 23–26 gender studies . 27–29 folklore studies . 30 yiddish Culture and folklore . 31 literature . 32–36 index . 37–39 sales information . 40 ordering information . inside back cover on the Cover a hugo steiner-Prag illustration from the 1916 edition of gustav Meyrink’s Der Golem. note the influence of german expressionism on steiner-Prag’s style, the foreboding atmosphere of the Josefov, and the orientalist depiction of the golem. from The Golem Redux by elizabeth r. baer (please see page 12 of this catalog). wayne state university Press is a distinctive urban publisher committed to supporting its parent institution’s core research, teaching, and service mission by generating high-quality scholarly and general-interest works of global importance. through its publishing program, the Press disseminates research, advances education, and serves the local community while expanding the international reputation of the Press and the university. this catalog includes titles from the following series: raPhael Patai series in Jewish AmeriCan Jewish folklore and anthroPology Civilization series Dan Ben-amos, editor Moses rischin and the Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Jonathan D. Sarna, editors Anthropology publishes books illuminating the the American Jewish Civilization Series features culturally rich Jewish heritage.
  • Gustav Meyrink's the Golem. a Sensatio

    Gustav Meyrink's the Golem. a Sensatio

    !" LIR.JOURNAL.12(20) """""""""""""""! " Sten Wistrand, »Gustav Meyrink’s The Golem. A Sensatio- nalist Shlock Novel or an Esoteric Vision of the World?« " ABSTRACT """"""""""""""""""""""" Gustav Meyrink lived in a time when the interest in spiritism, theo sophy and occult phenomena was widespread. He joined about every esoteric society available, attended séances, ex pe ri- mented with diets and drugs, and practiced alchemy and yoga. But he also, in a way, was a sceptic. In some circles, he still has a reputation as a man with deep insights in the true nature of being and has even been seen as a man with prophetic gifts. Controver- sial in his lifetime, his reputation as an author is still disputable. Jorge Luis Borges praised his works, while Ernst Pawel, in his Kafka-biography, dismisses The Golem as »a shlock novel«. In The Golem Meyrink transforms the Prague legends of Rabbi Loew’s creature of clay into a book of esoteric wisdom putting into play Kabbalistic and alchemist thinking, tarot cards and metempsychosis. The novel also has been both referred to, and rejected, as a story of horror or Gothic fction, and described as purely fantastic. I would like to discriminate between effect and function and maintain that Meyrink takes advantage of Gothic effects in order to convey his spiritual vision of the world. That aside, it is reasonable to argue that his foremost interest, as an author of fction, was to tell us a good and interesting story. For that reason you might also question if his references to esoteric traditions are to be taken wholly seriously or rather are to be seen as motifs in the hands of a quite self-indulgent novelist.
  • Kulturhistorische Bedingungen Der Fantastischen Literatur Um 1900

    Kulturhistorische Bedingungen Der Fantastischen Literatur Um 1900

    DIPLOMARBEIT Titel der Diplomarbeit „Kulturhistorische Bedingungen der fantastischen Literatur um 1900. Materialismuskritik bei Meyrink, Ewers und Strobl.“ Verfasser Stefan Weber angestrebter akademischer Grad Magister der Philosophie (Mag. phil.) Wien, November 2010 Studienkennzahl lt. Studienblatt: A 332 Studienrichtung lt. Studienblatt: Deutsche Philologie Betreuerin / Betreuer: Doz. Dr. Roland Innerhofer 2 Tausend Dank an Dr. Innerhofer für die gute Betreuung, das hilfreiche Feedback und vor allem seine Zeit, an Nataša Sienčnik und Georg Göstl für das wiederholte Korrekturlesen und die zahlreiche Unterstützung. Meiner Familie Danke für ihre Geduld. 3 4 Inhaltsverzeichnis Einleitung ...................................................................................................................................... 7 1. Was ist fantastische Literatur? .............................................................................................. 12 1.1. Definitionen des Fantastischen .................................................................................... 15 1.2. Das Fantastische als Schreibweise ............................................................................... 20 1.3. Die deutsche Fantastik um 1900 .................................................................................. 24 2. Bedingungen des Fantastischen. Kulturhistorische Betrachtungen ............................... 30 2.1. Kurze Geschichte der fantastischen Literatur............................................................ 31 2.1.1. Gegen-Aufklärung.