by ScottSpector (Author)
Around the turn of the twentieth century, Vienna and Berlin were centers of scientific knowledge, accompanied by a sense of triumphalism and confidence in progress. Yet they were also sites of fascination with urban decay, often focused on sexual and criminal deviants and the tales of violence surrounding them. Sensational media reports fed the prurient public's hunger for stories from the criminal underworld: sadism, sexual murder, serial killings, accusations of Jewish ritual child murder--as well as male and female homosexuality.
In Violent Sensations, Scott Spector explores how the protagonists of these stories--people at society's margins--were given new identities defined by the groundbreaking sciences of psychiatry, sexology, and criminology, and how this expert knowledge was then transmitted to an eager public by journalists covering court cases and police investigations. The book analyzes these sexual and criminal subjects on three levels: first, the expertise of scientists, doctors, lawyers, and scholars; second, the sensationalism of newspaper scandal and pulp fiction; and, third, the subjective ways that the figures themselves came to understand who they were. Throughout, Spector answers important questions about how fantasies of extreme depravity and bestiality figure into the central European self-image of cities as centers of progressive civilization, as well as the ways in which the sciences of social control emerged alongside the burgeoning emancipation of women and homosexuals.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 294
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 23 May 2016
ISBN 10: 022619678X
ISBN 13: 9780226196787
Violent Sensations offers an arresting anatomy of 'sensational' and scientific self-images that disclose multiple facets of fin-de-si cle metropolitan Europe as a crossroads of sexualized fantasies of violence and dreams of utopian emancipation--dreams that later often seemed like oncoming nightmares. In laboratories, libraries, law courts, and streets of Vienna and Berlin, the reader encounters emergent sexology, criminology, and (homo)sexual identity-formation as well as scandals, imagined conspiracies, 'lust murders, ' and uncanny accusations of ritual killing. Violent fantasies often located in the wake of World War I are found to be disturbingly active in the seemingly aestheticized garden of the turn of the century. Spector impressively navigates a turbulent sea of 'dialectical' tensions and more or less offset repetitions between science and scandal sheet, criminology and crime, detection and deviance--in brief, the presumably normative and what might appear to be its marginalized 'others.'
--Dominick LaCapra, Cornell University