ABSTRACT

This book takes a new, interdisciplinary approach to analyzing modern Viennese visual culture, one informed by Austro-German theater, contemporary medical treatises centered on hysteria, and an original examination of dramatic gestures in expressionist artworks. It centers on the following question: How and to what end was the human body discussed, portrayed, and utilized as an aesthetic metaphor in turn-of-the-century Vienna? By scrutinizing theatrically “hysterical” performances, avant-garde puppet plays, and images created by Oskar Kokoschka, Koloman Moser, Egon Schiele and others, Nathan J. Timpano discusses how Viennese artists favored the pathological or puppet-like body as their contribution to European modernism.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

A Conundrum of the Viennese Modern Body

chapter 1|26 pages

“The Semblance of Things”

Re-Visioning Viennese Expressionism

chapter 2|23 pages

“The Woman Emerges”

Medical Vision and the Spectacle of Hysteria

chapter 3|25 pages

Performing Hysteria

A Vogue for Hystero-Theatrical Gestures

chapter 4|30 pages

A Tale of Three Hysterics

Elektra, Isolde, and Salome

chapter 5|32 pages

The Inanimate Body Speaks

The Language of the Marionette Theater

chapter 6|36 pages

Pathological Puppets

The Body and the Marionette in Viennese Expressionism