Abstract

This present collection of essays concerns the representation of in literature... This introductory material is available in Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature: http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol22/iss1/2 New Illnesses-Old Problems Old Illnesses-New Problems Sander L. Gilman University of Chicago This present collection of essays concerns the representation of in literature. The time frame is modern and the focus is on turn-of-the-century Europe. This is not accidental, as the problems raised in this arena have been structured by the European modernist discourse on disease. We-at the end of another centurystill stand in thrall to models of which haunt us from the past. The end of the twentieth century begins to look somewhat like the end of the nineteenth. The long age of that marked the close of that age, a peace disrupted by innumerable minor wars fought by great powers against smaller states or among the smaller states themselves, seems to have settled in the long which began in 1945 and continues until today. Likewise, the nineteenth century was an age of mass illness, of tuberculosis, syphilis, cholera, that seemed to be beginning to be answered by the medical science, the of the laboratory and of public health. The late twentieth century suddenly has become the age of again. Cholera, tuberculosis, syphilis, and AIDS mark the close of the twentieth century in the public's fantasy as surely as versions of these diseases marked the last fin de siecle. Yet, of course, the illnesses are not the same-they have different contexts, are read in different ways, in the complex Western cultures in which we live, than they or their parallels were a hundred years ago. But there is more than a slight sense of continuity. Part of this may well be the simple sense of repetition built into the calendar-for turns of centuries have a great symbolic significance in the meaning we attribute to the calendar. But there are other meanings that do transcend merely the markers of chronological 1 Gilman: New Illnesses—Old Problems, Old Illnesses—New Problems Published by New Prairie Press 8 STCL, Volume 22, No. 1 (Winter, 1998) time. Thus there are meanings with which we wrestle whose structure was cast a hundred years ago. One can learn from the debates about the meaning of an even after a century. Thus the anxiety associated with the debate about compulsory reporting and hospitalization that accompanied tuberculosis has interesting parallels in our contemporary debates about compulsory reporting and hospitalization of people who are HIV positive. Thus the history of infection as discussed in Laura Otis's essay in this volume and the pattern of the self-representation of AIDS in the former GDR have interesting parallels. It is not the same which is represented, but the questions that arise, questions of the possibility of cure, of stigmatization, of family responsibility, of anxiety about the body politic, are all present in both times with both diseases, in colonial Britain and Germany as well as in the pseudo-Marxist culture of the GDR. Illnesses such as tuberculosis can be understood as a model for a (if not the) most pernicious and widely spread fatal of the nineteenth century. One can focus on the period after 1882, after the beginning of a modern, scientific understanding of the illness, and see the contradictions, continuities, and problems raised by this science of illness. The parallels will be indeed to AIDS but also to the new tuberculosis, which comes to be associated in the 1990s with AIDS. Here the debates about control, about meaning, and about focus come to be the means of providing a sense of the recycling of the symbolic structures associated with at the close of the millennium. In the present collection of essays, the focus is on the problems of representing illness. It does not deal with (autobiographical) narratives of or the idea that the practice of medicine itself is a discourse. In limiting the scope of this volume to illness and cultural representation, we reveal the riches of the project. There are a number of different models for discussing the question of representing in culture, beginning with Ulrike Kistner's study of the problems of representation within medicine itself. In specific case studies from the turn of the century, Laura Otis looks at the idea of colonization and discovery in Conan Doyle; readers will also find here Edward Brinkley on Wilde and D'Annunzio representing homosexuality as pathology; Iris Bruce on Franz Kafka's lesser known cousin Woody Allen and their fantasies of illness; Misha Kavka (no relation to Franz or Woody) on shell shock and masculinity after World War I; Roland Dollinger on the problem of society and physical trauma in Alfred DOeblin's work; Stephanie 2 Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature, Vol. 22, Iss. 1 [1998], Art. 2 http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol22/iss1/2 DOI: 10.4148/2334-4415.1431

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