Gustav Meyrink’s The Golem. A Sensationalist Shlock Novel or an Esoteric Vision of the World?
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Date
2020
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LIR. journal
Abstract
Gustav Meyrink lived in a time when the interest in spiritism,
theo sophy and occult phenomena was widespread. He joined
about every esoteric society available, attended séances, ex pe rimented
with diets and drugs, and practiced alchemy and yoga.
But he also, in a way, was a sceptic. In some circles, he still has a
reputation as a man with deep insights in the true nature of being
and has even been seen as a man with prophetic gifts. Controversial
in his lifetime, his reputation as an author is still disputable.
Jorge Luis Borges praised his works, while Ernst Pawel, in his
Kafka-biography, dismisses The Golem as »a shlock novel«.
In The Golem Meyrink transforms the Prague legends of Rabbi
Loew’s creature of clay into a book of esoteric wisdom putting
into play Kabbalistic and alchemist thinking, tarot cards and
metempsychosis. The novel also has been both referred to, and
rejected, as a story of horror or Gothic fiction, and described as
purely fantastic. I would like to discriminate between effect and
function and maintain that Meyrink takes advantage of Gothic
effects in order to convey his spiritual vision of the world. That
aside, it is reasonable to argue that his foremost interest, as an
author of fiction, was to tell us a good and interesting story. For
that reason you might also question if his references to esoteric
traditions are to be taken wholly seriously or rather are to be
seen as motifs in the hands of a quite self-indulgent novelist.
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Keywords
Western esotericism, occultism, Gustav Meyrink, tarot, kabbalah, alchemy, 20th-century literature