
Lustmord
Description
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Tatar focuses attention on the politically turbulent Weimar Republic, often viewed as the birthplace of a transgressive avant-garde modernism, where representations of female sexual mutilation abound. Here a revealing episode in the gender politics of cultural production unfolds as male artists and writers, working in a society consumed by fear of outside threats, envision women as enemies that can be contained and mastered through transcendent artistic expression. Not only does Tatar show that male artists openly identified with real-life sexual murderers--George Grosz posed as Jack the Ripper in a photograph where his model and future wife was the target of his knife--but she also reveals the ways in which victims were disavowed and erased.
Tatar first analyzes actual cases of sexual murder that aroused wide public interest in Weimar Germany. She then considers how the representation of murdered women in visual and literary works functions as a strategy for managing social and sexual anxieties, and shows how violence against women can be linked to the war trauma, to urban pathologies, and to the politics of cultural production and biological reproduction.
In exploring the complex relationship between victim and agent in cases of sexual murder, Tatar explains how the roles came to be destabilized and reversed, turning the perpetrator of criminal deeds into a defenseless victim of seductive evil. Throughout the West today, the creation of similar ideological constructions still occurs in societies that have only recently begun to validate the voices of its victims. Maria Tatar's book opens up an important discussion for readers seeking to understand the forces behind sexual violence and its portrayal in the cultural media throughout this century.
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Content
- Cover Page
- Half-title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Part One: Sexual Murder: Weimar Germany and Its Cultural Legacy
- Chapter One. Morbid Curiosity: Why Lustmord?
- Chapter Two. "Ask Mother": The Construction of Sexual Murder
- Chapter Three. Crime, Contagion, and Containment:Sexual Murder in the Weimar Republic
- Part Two: Case Studies
- Chapter Four. Fighting for Life: Figurations of War, Women, and the City in the Work of Otto Dix
- Chapter Five. Life in the Combat Zone: Military and Sexual Anxieties in the Work of George Grosz
- Chapter Six. The Corpse Vanishes: Gender, Violence, and Agency in Alfred Doblin's Berlin Alexanderplatz
- Chapter Seven. The Killer as Victim: Fritz Lang's M
- Chapter Eight. Reinventions: Murder in the Name of Art
- Notes
- Index
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