Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Beyond the Coffeehouse. Vienna as a Cultural Center between the World Wars
- Part I Cultural and Political Parameters
- Part II Jewishness, Race, and Politics
- Part III Cultural Forms
- Part IV Literary Case Studies
- 9 Anticipating Freud's Pleasure Principle? A Reading of Ernst Weiss's War Story “Franta Zlin” (1919)
- 10 Facts and Fiction: Rudolf Brunngraber, Otto Neurath, and Viennese Neue Sachlichkeit
- 11 The Viennese Legacy of Casanova: The Late Erotic Writings of Arthur Schnitzler and Franz Blei
- 12 An Englishman Abroad: Literature, Politics, and Sex in John Lehmann's Writings on Vienna in the 1930s
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
9 - Anticipating Freud's Pleasure Principle? A Reading of Ernst Weiss's War Story “Franta Zlin” (1919)
from Part IV - Literary Case Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Beyond the Coffeehouse. Vienna as a Cultural Center between the World Wars
- Part I Cultural and Political Parameters
- Part II Jewishness, Race, and Politics
- Part III Cultural Forms
- Part IV Literary Case Studies
- 9 Anticipating Freud's Pleasure Principle? A Reading of Ernst Weiss's War Story “Franta Zlin” (1919)
- 10 Facts and Fiction: Rudolf Brunngraber, Otto Neurath, and Viennese Neue Sachlichkeit
- 11 The Viennese Legacy of Casanova: The Late Erotic Writings of Arthur Schnitzler and Franz Blei
- 12 An Englishman Abroad: Literature, Politics, and Sex in John Lehmann's Writings on Vienna in the 1930s
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
IN HIS TREATISE SITTENGESCHICHTE DES WELTKRIEGS (A Moral History of the World War, 1930) Berlin sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld noted how belles lettres had been far readier than clinical medicine to examine the impact of wartime injuries on the sexual and psychological life of the victims. Some well-remembered examples of that readiness are works by Ernst Toller (Hinkemann, 1924), Sean O'Casey (The Silver Tassie, 1927), and D. H. Lawrence (Lady Chatterley's Lover, 1928), all of which deal with soldiers rendered sexually impotent by their wounds. Much less well known is Ernst Weiss's story “Franta Zlin,” first published in the Munich periodical Genius in 1919. Although “Franta Zlin” has only rarely been the subject of scholarly investigation (and is therefore typical of Ernst Weiss's oeuvre as a whole), it is a work of great and occasionally shocking power, which Marcel Reich-Ranicki recently included in his extended collection of German literature provocatively entitled Der Kanon.
In this radically compressed third-person narrative of fewer than twenty pages Weiss confronts the reader with scenes of suicide, rape, pillage, murder, and the unmanning of Zlin, a thirty-year-old Viennese goldsmith and married man who, in the course of his military service (between autumn 1914 and summer 1915) mutates from “sanfter Mensch” (gentle man) into monster. Although this metamorphosis may reflect Nietzschean notions of the brute in man, more than likely it reflects the author's artistic and personal relationship to Franz Kafka.
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- Information
- Interwar ViennaCulture between Tradition and Modernity, pp. 193 - 205Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009