Sexual Murder: Weimar Germany
and Its Cultural Legacy
Morbid Curiosity:
Why Lustmord?
I don't particularly want to chop up women but it seems to work.
Brian De Palma
This book represents the long answer to a question that seemed trivial when it first arose, but that haunted me with a curious insistence. Who was that man named Haarmann in verses that I had heard sung by Germansâboth in real life and in movies?
Just you wait 'til it's your time,
Haarmann will come after you,
With his chopper, oh so fine,
Heâll make mincemeat out of you.1
In Fritz Langâs film M, which opens in a subtly unnerving manner when the innocent voice of a child chants this grisly rhyme, the words âblack manâ are substituted for Haarmann.2 But most variants (and the one still widely known in Germany today) identify the cleaver-wielding fiend of these verses as âHaarmann.â While the name Haarmann, as I quickly discovered, does not appear in the standard cultural histories of Weimar Germany, it can be found with astonishing frequency in newspapers of the time ranging from the liberal Frankfurt Times (Frankfurter Zeitung) to the Communist Red Flag (Rote Fahne) and in acclaimed novels such as Yvan Gollâs Sodom Berlin and Alfred Döblinâs Berlin Alexanderplatz.3 When Lang released his film in 1931 and Döblin published his novel in 1929, both could count on general familiarity with the case of Fritz Haarmann, a serial murderer executed in 1925. They could also assume that their audiences were familiar with a range of other notorious casesâthe Vampire of DĂŒsseldorf or the Silesian Bluebeardâinvolving what a âmedical manâ in Hitchcockâs Frenzy calls âcriminal sexual psvchopaths.â4 It was Fritz Haarmann who tipped me off to those cases and to the way in which they were a conspicuous presence, yet also a closely guarded secret, in Weimar's artistic, cinematic, and literary production.
Much as collective cultural memory has excluded Fritz Haarmann from the historical record and preserved his deeds in the popular imagination as something closer to lore than to fact, it was impossible to eradicate his real-life existence entirely Of late, the Haarmann case has attracted a certain amount of notoriety, but, in one instance at least, the effort to remember turned into what was perceived to be a scandalous attempt to commemorate his deeds. In Haarmann's native city of Hanover, Alfred Hrdlicka proposed erecting a monument to Haarmannâa statue that would be a provocation to be sureâbut with the hope of provoking thought. It goes without saying that the plan was never approved, but Hrdlicka still had the chance to articulate what it was that made Haarmann worthy of memorialization. Haarmann's offenses lay at the heart of âthe enigmas of a nation,â Hrdlicka declared. âHaarmann the mass murderer . . . was not only a lightning flash revealing the state-sanctioned mass murders that were to come; his antisocial preoccupations and drives were, above all, what made him a prototype of his time.â5 Hrdlicka may be loading the person of Haarmann with more cultural and social baggage than a single pathological case deserves, but his refusal to erase Haarmann from the historical record and his determination to investigate his deeds as symptomatic of something larger than the murderer himself guided me in my investigations.
What next caught my attention, after learning more about Haarmann, were the murder victimsânot just Haarmann's, but those who began to appear as a virtually ubiquitous presence in Weimar's artistic production. The sheer number of canvases from the 1920s with the title Lustmord (Sexual Murder) ought to have been a source of wonder for Weimar's cultural historians long before now. But more startling than the way in which real-life murderers and their victims enter the referential codes of works of art from Weimar Germany is the way in which the producers of those works become personally implicated in what they put into words and images, so deeply implicated that it is tempting to give some credence to Degas's belief that a painting demands as much cunning, malice, and vice as does a crime.6 George Grosz, who painted more than his share of what he called "ladykillers'' (in the literal sense of the term) and of their mutilated victims, once had himself photographed in the pose of Jack the Ripper (fig. 1). Menacing his victim with a knife pointed at her genitals, he transforms himself from the creative artist who frames, contains, and appropriates the seductive appeal of his model into a murderer prepared to destroy the source of male heterosexual desire and of artistic inspiration. The female modelâabsorbed in the contemplation of her own image (note the redundant presence of both a hand mirror and a near full-length mirror)âputs herself on display in a gesture of serene self-sufficiency. She has, in a sense, made the artist superfluous by creating herself as a work of art, as the target of the male connoisseur's gaze. And that reason alone may be sufficient to account for the artist's impersonation of a man prepared to assault, disfigure, and mutilate the body before him.
1. George Grosz as Jack the Ripper, Self-Portrait with Eva Peter in the Artistâs Studio (1918). As Eva Peter admires herself in a hand mirror, George Grosz emerges from behind a larger mirror in which she is reflected to stage a mock assault on the woman who was to become his wife two years later.
But the photograph of Grosz does not give us the real thing. In fact, it emphasizes its own "unrealityâ in the proliferation of simulacra ranging from mirror images and photographs through masks and dolls. The photograph appears to represent nothing more than a witty charade, with the artist merely masquerading as murderer. Still, murderâeven when it is âjustâ staged, as in this snapshotâis never entirely innocent. That Grosz not only drew and painted mutilated female corpses but also felt compelled to act out the role of murderer seems telling, particularly when we consider that there was a real erotic tie between the Grosz in the photograph and his model. (Eva Peter, the woman on display, was to become his wife two years later.) What was it that drove Grosz to open the boundaries between art and lifeâfirst, to depict killers on his canvases, then, to impersonate them in photographs? That he was engaged in mimetic practices that were violent from both an aesthetic and a somatic point of view becomes evident from descriptions of his working methods. One critic points out that he turned his canvases into "scenes of crimes,â applying the knife to them and spraying them with red paint.7 Was this part of the same syndrome that led Frank Wedekind to enact on stage the role of Jack the Ripper in a play that he had written and that had starred his wife as Jack's victim? Or that motivated Otto Dix to paint a self-portrait entitled Sex Murderer and to smear it with his red handprintsâjust as if he wanted to be caught red-handed? That real-life murderers and their victims have a habit of turning up in plays and novels or making appearances in paintings and films even as artists construct their own identities as murderous assailants suggests a strange bond between murder and art, one to which Thomas De Quincey referred in his meditations "On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Artsâ (1827).8 This book on Lustmord tries to define the nature of that connection and to identify how it expresses itself in a variety of ways, some self-evident and straightforward, others surreptitious and complex.
In recent years, scholars from a variety of disciplines have trained our attention on the gender politics of cultural production in Germany during the prewar era through the war years into the 1920s.9 Their efforts have made it possible to discern the outlines of a modernist project that aestheticizes violence and turns the mutilated female body into an object of fascination and dread, riveting in its display of disfiguring violence yet also repugnant in the detail of its morbid carnality Whether studying Rudolf Schlichter's painting Sexual Murder, exploring the "Sex Murderer Grottoâ in Kurt Schwitters's Cathedral of Sexual Misery, or observing how Alfred Döblin reconstructs the psychic life of Rosa Luxemburg and sexualizes her political assassination, it becomes evident that the representation of murdered women must function as an aesthetic strategy for managing certain kinds of sexual, social, and political anxieties and for constituting an artistic and social identity.
Developing arguments about the positioning of sexual murder in the 1920s requires a close look not only at Weimar Germany's cultural understanding of the killers, but also our own ways of explaining what is at stake in cases of serial murder. This issue is addressed in the next chapter by attending to definitions and to the way in which they are shaped by the identity, deeds, and accounts of historical murderers. Our fascination with sexual murder stems in part from its mystification as a deed that, in its perversion of love into hate, could be committed only by a savage beast or deranged monster rather than a human being. Yet time and again, these murderers are constructed as sons seeking revenge against womenâagainst mothers as agents of sexual prohibition or against women in general as icons of licentious sexuality. Similarly, those who commit murder on canvases, pages, or screens are, as I try to demonstrate, competing with the reproductive powers of women or aiming to transcend the laws of biological procreation affiliated with women's bodies. I dwell in detail on Hitchcock's representation of sexual murder, in part because it was shaped so powerfully by German cinematic portrayals, in part because it so clearly captures Western notions of what drives men to murder women. These reflections are followed by a chapter that describes actual cases of sexual murder in Weimar Germany and looks at the ways in which those cases were reported by the press, investigated by the police, and overseen by the judicial system.
The second part of this book presents case studies of works by artists, writers, and filmmakers. Looking at representations in a variety of media requires an interdisciplinary approach that turns the once closely patrolled boundaries between literature, the visual arts, and cinema into permeable borders. I examine what Louis Montrose has called the âsynchronic text of a cultural system," trying to establish a kind of cultural intertextuality in which case studies illuminate artistic production even as fictional accounts broaden our understanding of social realities. If we reflect on the way in which Jack the Ripper has been featured in so many films, plays, and novels that he is now as much literary construct as cultural case history or consider the way in which Norman Bates has found his way into legal arguments and psychiatric studies, it becomes clear that the study of sexual murder requires an approach that recognizes the controversial âtextuality of history and historicity of texts"10 without, however, dissolving the line between historical fact and imaginative construct.
This study analyzes verbal and visual representations of sexual murder, or more specificially what the German language calls Lustmord. (I shall use that term interchangeably with the English âsexual murder," though the German term Lustâwhich implies desire and pleasure along with sexual gainâcaptures more precisely the multiple dimensions of the motives driving this type of killing.) It also considers the sociocultural field that shaped those images and produced, in many cases, a surprising ideological consonance among male artists who prided themselves on their highly differentiated and personalized political beliefs. Where the consonance exists, I emphasize it. But I have also resisted homogenizing constructions that would turn energetic messiness into falsely stable and stabilizing arguments about the paintings, texts, and films discussed. I have tried not to configure the material in each chapter into completely tidy, but oversimplified and inaccurate, categoriesâwith the result that disjunctions and discontinuities emerge in the case studies. They are there because disruptive anomalies are also a part of what constitutes the work of individual artists and writers and because the anomalies are often more revealing than the signatures of a particular style.
For decades, images of the victims of Lustmord were suppressed in our investigations of what has come to be known as Weimar Cultureâin part because of their disturbing content, in part because of their unsettling effect on our attempts to produce stabilizing definitions of modernist aesthetics by emphasizing manner over matter. Elisabeth Bronfen has stressed the degree to which overkill has also desensitized us to the image of female corpses in books, on the screen, or on canvases: âBecause they are so familiar, so evident, we are culturally blind to the ubiquity of representations of feminine death."11
That cultural blindness often takes the symptomatic form of naturalizing rape and murder directed at women. The filmmaker Brian De Palma has insisted that "using women in situations where they are killed or sexually attackedâ is nothing more than a "genre convention . . . like using violins when people look at each other.â12 To argue that images of sexual and homicidal assault are culturally innocent is to take an almost willfully naive position about the role of ideology in artistic productions. What makes woman's position as victim, either in cinema or in real life, ""natural?â The violent scenes De Palma puts on screen are anything but routine, workaday images devoid of substance. They figure as arresting moments that shock us and challenge us to reflect on the complex interlocking of gender roles, sexuality, and violence.
Yet even once we agree to problematize images of sexual violence, our interpretive habits can prevent us from facing the full implications of what is represented. As twentieth-century readers and spectators, we have been trained to view violence as an aesthetic strategy funded by a powerful transgressive energy that is the mark of the avant-garde. It is seen as nothing more than a pretext for practicing the modernist art of fragmentation and disfigurement. The referential matter of modernist art is relentlessly subordinated to and effaced by its spiritualizing manner. Thus Picasso's Demoiselles dâAvignon, which has been characterized as depicting a âtidal wave of female aggression" and âsavage, disfiguring sexual menace," has been reframed to become a modernist icon of the viewer's âcollision with art" or the âemancipation of form from content."13 Focusing exclusively on formal features and insisting on disfigurement as a purely aesthetic principle can distract from facing the ful...