“’s kommt doch alles an die Sonnen”: Theodor Fontanes Unterm Birnbaum und die visuellen Regime massenmedialer Kommunikation im 19. Jahrhundert

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributed

Abstract

By analyzing Theodor Fontane’s crime novella Unterm Birnbaum (1885), this article explores how the advent of mass communication in popular periodicals as well as the increased prominence of visual media in nineteenth-century Germany challenged realist writers to reflect on modes of medial reality construction in their texts. Unterm Birnbaum was published in Die Gartenlaube, the most prominent family journal of its time that aspired to connect hundreds of thousands of German-speaking readers around the globe in a virtual space conceptualized as a village-like community. Fontane’s novella adapts this village metaphor by constructing a village-story that stages the communicative mechanisms that construe reality in the public sphere of mass media. While the literary village Tschechin seems to be organized by forms of panoptic observation and visual control, it also allows manipulative “actors” to utilize the villagers’ desire for visual spectacle and entertaining stories to create distorted versions of reality emerging from gossip and rumors. In the experimental space of the village, Unterm Birnbaum thus shows how modern media produces its own notions of “truth” and thereby scrutinizes realism’s programmatic quest to recognize and depict reality in a changing media-cultural environment.

Translated title of the contribution
"Everything comes to light in the end"
Theodor Fontane's Unterm Birnbaum and the visual regime of mass media communication in the 19th century

Details

Original languageGerman
Pages (from-to)47-67
Number of pages21
JournalColloquia Germanica: Internationale Zeitschrift für Germanistik
Volume52
Issue number1-2
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2021
Peer-reviewedNo

External IDs

Scopus 85101205002
ORCID /0000-0002-1499-7513/work/142249554

Keywords

Keywords

  • Crime, Fontane, Journal, Media, Realism, Visuality