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Gothic Infections: Arthur Schnitzler and the Haunted Culture of Modernism

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Kolkenbrock, ME 

Abstract

The article examines the intersection between Gothic elements and the theme of infection in two narrative texts by the Viennese doctor-writer Arthur Schnitzler. It argues that the re-emergence of the Gothic in modernist literature draws from the popularized scientific discourses of bacteriology around 1900 and their metaphorical imagination of germs as invisible invaders and enemies. The theme of infection functions as a Gothic trope, which is used to negotiate the experience of increasingly blurred boundaries between self and ‘other’. Schnitzler’s texts reveal how the fear of infection becomes metaphorically linked to the protagonists’ loss of their secured sense of self within the normative boundaries of a bourgeois masculinity.

Description

Keywords

47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4703 Language Studies, 4705 Literary Studies

Journal Title

Modern Language Review

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0026-7937

Volume Title

113

Publisher

Modern Humanities Research Association
Sponsorship
Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft (LBG) (unknown)