THE DEMIURGIC ASPECT OF MEYRINK'S THE GOLEM

The article examines Der Golem (1915) by G. Meyrink as a genuine text which various motifs, derived from various versions of the original legend, relate to the author's own ideas about the development of the personal self. The article mainly focuses on the central aspect of the golem legend and its representation in the novel, e.g. on the "rabbi / golem" dichotomy that reflects a broader "creator" (wisdom) / "creature" (innocence) dichotomy. The relativity of the categories "knowledge" / "innocence" and the ambivalence of the demiurgic aspect are reinforced, on the one hand, by the framed narration, on the other hand, by a broad system of characters grouped around the images associated with the original legend: rabbi - father - archivist - rag-picker - puppeteer - magician - carver - doctor. The concept of the fragmented self is fundamental for all Meyrink's novels which protagonists, just like "golems," develop into absolute subjects throughout the narrative. Thus, behind the references to exotic spiritual practices, Meyrink's works reveal a romantic longing for the missing integrity, as well as the modernist interpretation of the Bildungsroman structure.

Authors
Publisher
RUSSIAN ACAD SCIENCES, GORKY INST WORLD LITERATURE
Number of issue
4
Language
Russian
Pages
86-97
Status
Published
Volume
4
Year
2019
Organizations
  • 1 Peoples Friendship Univ Russia, Inst foreign Languages, Moscow, Russia
  • 2 Peoples Friendship Univ Russia, RUDN Univ, Inst Foreign Languages, Miklukho Maklaya St 7, Moscow 117198, Russia
Keywords
golem; Gustav Meyrink; Austrian literature; character formation; creator-creation
Date of creation
10.02.2020
Date of change
10.02.2020
Short link
https://repository.rudn.ru/en/records/article/record/56703/
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