Synopses & Reviews
This book connects the invention of masochism by turn-of-the-century sexologist Richard von Krafft-Ebing and writer Leopold von Sacher-Masoch to its contemporary appropriation by gay and lesbian filmmakers. Krafft-Ebing conceived of masochism as a literary perversion and as a gendered affliction. Mennel compares central texts by Sacher-Masoch with Monika Treut's film Seduction: The Cruel Woman and Kutlug Ataman's film Lola and Billy the Kid, negotiating contemporary feminist theory and queer studies organized around gender and sexuality, on the one hand, and the fetish and masquerade, on the other.
Review
"In her superb investigation of 'masochistic aesthetics,' Mennel returns to the constitutive texts of Sacher-Masoch and Krafft-Ebing, to engage with more recent debates in feminist, queer, and postcolonial theory concerning masochism's triangulation of power, fantasy, and history. Parting ways with theoretical emphases on white masculinity and celebrations of performative subversion, Mennel argues that masochistic aesthetics ultimately fails to convert symbolic submission into social power for those traditionally positioned as fetishized Others in the fantasies of white male masochists: women, queers, disenfranchised ethnic groups. She challenges us to read the symptoms of two historic breakdowns of egalitarian ideologies and integrative state systems staged in literary and cinematic fantasies at the last two
fins-de-siècle."--Katrin Sieg, Associate Professor of German, Georgetown University
"Mennel trains a keen bifocal lens reciprocally to illuminate the late nineteenth-century works of Krafft-Ebing and Sacher-Masoch and the late twentieth-century films of Treut and Ataman. She carefully retraces and finely nuances the interplay between such coordinates as masquerade and fetishism, queer and feminist theories, and psychoanalysis and politics. These juxtapositions result in a work as analytically rigorous as it is perceptive and daring."--Alice Kuzniar, Professor of German, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Synopsis
Defining masochism as 'literary perversion', this book probes the productivity of masochistic aesthetics in the literature of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch and contemporary queer films, analysing radical accounts of desire, gender, and sexuality.
About the Author
Barbara Mennel is Assistant Professor of German Studies and Cinema Studies in the Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies and the English Department at the University of Florida, Gainesville.
Table of Contents
The Literary Perversion: The Invention of Masochism at the Fin-de-Siecle * The Gendered Fantasy of Masochistic Aesthetics: Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's
Venus in Furs * Lesbian Sadomasochism Rewrites Venus in Furs: Monika Treut and Elfi Mikesch's
Seduction: The Cruel Woman * Cross-Dressing for Platonic Love: Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's
The Love of Pluto * Male Femininity as Sacrificial Corpse: Kutlug Ataman's Lola and Billy the Kid