Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Haunting (Literary) History: An Introduction to German Gothic
- 2 “The echo of the question, as if it had merely resounded in a tomb”: The Dark Anthropology of the Schauerroman in Schiller's Der Geisterseher
- 3 Blaming the Other: English Translations of Benedikte Naubert's Hermann von Unna (1788/1794)
- 4 Scott, Hoffmann, and the Persistence of the Gothic
- 5 Cultural Transfer in the Dublin University Magazine: James Clarence Mangan and the German Gothic
- 6 In the Maelstrom of Interpretation: Reshaping Terror and Horror between 1798 and 1838 — Gleich, Hoffmann, Poe
- 7 Popular Ghosts: Heinrich Heine on German Geistesgeschichte as Gothic Novel
- 8 The Spirit World of Art and Robert Schumann's Gothic Novel Project: The Impact of Gothic Literature on Schumann's Writings
- 9 About Face: E. T. A. Hoffmann, Weimar Film, and the Technological Afterlife of Gothic Physiognomy
- 10 Of Rats, Wolves, and Men: The Pied Piper as Gothic Revenant and Provenant in Wilhelm Raabe's Die Hämelschen Kinder
- 11 The Lady in White or the Laws of the Ghost in Theodor Fontane's Vor dem Sturm
- 12 On Golems and Ghosts: Prague as a Site of Gothic Modernism
- 13 “Ein Gespenst geht um”: Christa Wolf, Irina Liebmann, and the Post-Wall Gothic
- Works Cited
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
2 - “The echo of the question, as if it had merely resounded in a tomb”: The Dark Anthropology of the Schauerroman in Schiller's Der Geisterseher
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Haunting (Literary) History: An Introduction to German Gothic
- 2 “The echo of the question, as if it had merely resounded in a tomb”: The Dark Anthropology of the Schauerroman in Schiller's Der Geisterseher
- 3 Blaming the Other: English Translations of Benedikte Naubert's Hermann von Unna (1788/1794)
- 4 Scott, Hoffmann, and the Persistence of the Gothic
- 5 Cultural Transfer in the Dublin University Magazine: James Clarence Mangan and the German Gothic
- 6 In the Maelstrom of Interpretation: Reshaping Terror and Horror between 1798 and 1838 — Gleich, Hoffmann, Poe
- 7 Popular Ghosts: Heinrich Heine on German Geistesgeschichte as Gothic Novel
- 8 The Spirit World of Art and Robert Schumann's Gothic Novel Project: The Impact of Gothic Literature on Schumann's Writings
- 9 About Face: E. T. A. Hoffmann, Weimar Film, and the Technological Afterlife of Gothic Physiognomy
- 10 Of Rats, Wolves, and Men: The Pied Piper as Gothic Revenant and Provenant in Wilhelm Raabe's Die Hämelschen Kinder
- 11 The Lady in White or the Laws of the Ghost in Theodor Fontane's Vor dem Sturm
- 12 On Golems and Ghosts: Prague as a Site of Gothic Modernism
- 13 “Ein Gespenst geht um”: Christa Wolf, Irina Liebmann, and the Post-Wall Gothic
- Works Cited
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Schiller'sGeisterseher (The Ghost-seer) has long been regarded as a prototype of the Schauerroman. Such was the view taken of the work by Adalbert von Hanstein in a positivistic study written in 1903, and Jürgen Viering concurs exactly a century later in his entry in the Reallexikon der deutschen Literaturwissenschaft. At the same time researchers never fail to emphasize that Schiller's text was not merely a sensational success at the time of its appearance between 1787 and 1789, and indeed his greatest literary triumph measured in terms of sheer popularity and number of editions, but that in the complexity of its ideas and narrative techniques it excels the mass of ghost, robber, and secret-society fictions that make up the bulk of the genre. In short, Der Geisterseher is seen as both the prototype and a masterpiece of the Schauerroman.
Schiller's novel certainly was the product of the contemporary controversies around Geisterseherei (necromancy). We know that he followed the debates on the subject in the Berlinische Monatsschrift, especially those about the arch-swindler and occultist Cagliostro, and among those in particular a contribution from the Duke of Württemberg, Eugen Friedrich Heinrich, who, by advocating tolerance of speculative philosophy and of the belief in apparitions, triggered fears about the Protestant duke's possible conversion to Catholicism. Cagliostro and Duke Eugen subsequently found their way into Schiller's novel in the figures of the Armenian and the Prince whom he manipulates to the point of psychological destruction.
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- Information
- Popular RevenantsThe German Gothic and its International Reception, 1800–2000, pp. 44 - 59Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012