Intertextual Exoticism: Oceania and Colonial Loss in Early Twentieth-Century German Literature
By (Author) Dr. or Prof. Richard Sperber
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
24th April 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Comparative literature
Hardback
320
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
Intertextual Exoticism reads a body of non-canonical German exoticist literature published after imperial Germany's loss of colonial Oceania in 1914, applying theories of "intertextuality" (Kristeva) and recent scholarship on literary exoticism to explore Germany's postwar crises of psychology, masculinity, and national identity mapped onto Oceanic spaces. Many readers are familiar with late Victorian texts expressing imperial Britain's anxieties. Richard Sperber expands the scope of these texts in the context of a post-imperial Europe, examining how German exoticist literature, published after German colonial loss in Oceania in 1914, intensifies the gothic themes and subjectivities of these Victorian texts. The first part of this study examines eight adventure narratives of Oceania, demonstrating how they do not necessarily present or represent a single, unified German colonial project. This, Sperber argues, is contrasted with Germany's colonial presence in and literary representations of Africa and reveals a nuance in anxieties as shown in a Pacific portrayed as a space of ambiguity rather than binary oppositions. The second part then pairs five well-known exoticist texts, including Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Stevenson's The Beach of Flase, Haggard's She, Hitchens' The Garden of Allah, and Wilde's Salom, with five non-canonical exoticist German texts. Sperber shows through these pairings how German literary exoticism becomes a transnational and intertextual literature that rereads dominant themes in 20th-century Europe's greater literatures of exoticism and colonial loss.
Richard Sperber is Associate Professor of German and Spanish at Carthage College, USA. He is the author of The Discourse of Flanerie in Antonio Muoz Molinas Texts (2015).