“Was bedeutet der Stein?”: Fetishism, Profanation, and Parody in Fontane’s Grete Minde

Authors

  • Erica Weitzman Northwestern University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5399/uo/konturen.8.0.3706

Abstract

This article explores the function of the precarious (non-)significance of the thing in Theodor Fontane’s 1879 novella Grete Minde. On the surface a simple tale of exclusion and revenge in seventeenth-century Brandenburg and a seeming anomaly in Fontane’s oeuvre, the novella also contains a barely visible leitmotif of the agency of things on the cusp of their disempowerment, not to say fall into vulgar parody and obscene joke. This article reads the status of the thing in Grete Minde not only as a key to some of the text’s more curious narrative choices, but also as a mark of the persistence of the ontological and aesthetic questions of the Reformation and as Fontane’s ambivalent self-reflection on the task of the novelist in the modern era.

Author Biography

Erica Weitzman, Northwestern University

Erica Weitzman is Assistant Professor of German at Northwestern University. She received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from NYU, and has held positions at the Universität Konstanz and the University of California, Berkeley. Her most recent publications include the monograph Irony’s Antics: Walser, Kafka, Roth and the German Comic Tradition(Northwestern UP, 2015) and the co-edited volume Suspensionen. Über das Untote (Fink, forthcoming 2015). She is currently working on a project on the concept of obscenity as a question of representation in German and European realism.

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Published

2015-10-09

How to Cite

Weitzman, E. (2015). “Was bedeutet der Stein?”: Fetishism, Profanation, and Parody in Fontane’s Grete Minde. Konturen, 8, 71–96. https://doi.org/10.5399/uo/konturen.8.0.3706

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Articles