Insane Run
Railroad and Dark Modernity
Abstract
This is a book about impending catastrophe. The metaphorical insane “run“ ends with the outbreak of the First World War. The book focuses on European culture of the late nineteenth century and the Polish contribution to it. The word “dark“ used to describe modernity is understood as a metaphor of gradual and permanent devaluation of the idea of progress, as a fading hope for the future of Europe as bright, predictable, prosperous, and safe. The “darkening“ also receives a literal sense. At the end of the nineteenth century, darkness found its way back to the public space – in the theaters, panoramas, dioramas, and “love tunnels“, which awaited the visitors of American and European amusement parks.
Keywords
Burzyński; Dark; Dorociński; early cinema; Fazan; Golubiewski; Insane; Kowalska; Łukasz; Małgorzata; melodrama; Mikołaj; Modernity; nineteenth century; popular culture; Railroad; railroad disaster; Side; technology in literature; Teresa; Tomasik; WojciechDOI
10.3726/b17421ISBN
9783631832172, 9783631832189, 9783631832196, 9783631831823, 9783631832172Publisher website
https://www.peterlang.com/Publication date and place
Bern, 2020Series
Modernity in Question, 14Classification
Literature: history and criticism