UID:
edocfu_9958354175902883
Umfang:
1 online resource(vi,242p.) :
,
illustrations.
Ausgabe:
Electronic reproduction. Berlin/Boston : De Gruyter. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Ausgabe:
System requirements: Web browser.
Ausgabe:
Access may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.
ISBN:
9783110306118
Serie:
spectrum Literaturwissenschaft / spectrum Literature; 38
Inhalt:
Understanding how ‘contagion’ and ‘infection’ have become powerful metaphors requires a historical reconstruction of this semantic field in the late 19th and early 20th century, when these concepts acquired a scientific meaning. The volume offers an interdisciplinary approach to the cultural history of contagionism between medical bacteriology, the social sciences and literary adaptations. The symbolic implications of ‘contagion’ and high-profile contagious diseases are addressed, which mark the boundaries between sick and healthy, familiar and alien, morally pure and impure.
Anmerkung:
Frontmatter --
,
Table of Contents --
,
Introduction /
,
‘Social Contagionism’: Psychology, Criminology and Sociology in the Slipstream of Infection /
,
The Overlap of Discourses of Contagion: Economic, Sexual, and Psychological /
,
Exoticism, Bacteriology and the Staging of the Dangerous /
,
Rousing Emotions in the Description of Contagious Diseases in Modernism /
,
Anarchist and Aphrodite: On the Literary History of Germs /
,
"[…] an entirely new form of bacteria for them": Contagionism and its Consequences in Laßwitz and Wells /
,
Genius and Degenerate? Thomas Mann’s Doktor Faustus and a Medical Discourse on Syphilis /
,
Aweysha: Spiritual Epidemics and Psychic Contagion in the Works of Gustav Meyrink /
,
Living with Rats and Mosquitoes: Different Paradigms of Cohabitation with Parasites in a German Narrative of Contagion around 1930 /
,
Infectious Diseases in Max Frisch /
,
Afterword /
,
Notes on Contributors --
,
Index of Names and Works.
,
Also available in print edition.
,
In English.
Weitere Ausg.:
ISBN 9783110305722
Weitere Ausg.:
ISBN 9783110306125
Sprache:
Englisch
DOI:
10.1515/9783110306118
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110306118