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My own private Germany : Daniel Paul Schreber's secret history of modernity / Eric L. Santner.
LIBRA RC520.S33 S26 1996
Available from offsite location
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Santner, Eric L., 1955-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Schreber, Daniel Paul, 1842-1911--Mental health.
- Schreber, Daniel Paul.
- Schreber, Daniel Paul, 1842-1911--Influence.
- Schreber, Daniel Paul, 1842-1911.
- Mental health.
- Germany--Intellectual life--19th century.
- Germany.
- Intellectual life.
- Germany--Intellectual life--20th century.
- National socialism--Psychological aspects.
- National socialism.
- Modernism (Art).
- Modernism (Literature).
- Physical Description:
- xiv, 200 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press, 1996.
- Summary:
- In November 1893, Daniel Paul Schreber, recently named presiding judge of the Saxon Supreme Court, was on the verge of a psychotic breakdown and entered a Leipzig psychiatric clinic. He would spend the rest of the nineteenth century in mental institutions. Once released he published his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (1903), a harrowing account of real and delusional persecution, political intrigue, and states of sexual ecstasy as God's private concubine. Freud's famous case study of Schreber elevated the Memoirs into the most important psychiatric textbook of paranoia. In light of Eric Santner's analysis, Schreber's text becomes legible as a sort of "nerve bible" of fin-de-siecle preoccupations and obsessions, an archive of the very phantasms which would, after the traumas of war, revolution, and the end of empire, coalesce into the core elements of National Socialist ideology.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 0691026289
- OCLC:
- 33281906
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