Friday, November 19, 2010
Dr. Mabuse: An Introduction
Like Fantomas before him, Dr. Mabuse is criminally unknown in the United States. The master villain was introduced in Norbert Jacques’ 1922 novel, Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler (also published as Dr. Mabuse, Master of Mystery). Jacques was a French journalist who had immigrated to Germany and wrote the novel as a scathing indictment of the corruption prevalent in the waning days of the Weimar Republic.
Dr. Mabuse is a practicing psychiatrist. He is also an avid occultist who conducts séances and practices Mesmerism. A master of disguise, Mabuse is also the head of a vast criminal empire controlling gambling, drugs, and prostitution throughout the Berlin underworld. Mabuse maintains a stranglehold on both the criminal lower class and the degenerate upper class through their addictions to vice and their reliance upon the occult and psychiatry to direct their lives.
The novel captures much of the corruption and anti-Semitism that were leading Germany on a downward spiral toward Nazism. Mabuse’s surprising ambition is to transform his empire of crime and deception into a utopian dream of a socialist paradise. Jacques saw socialism, the influence of modern psychiatry, and the growing interest in the occult as being as much a threat to Germany as the vice dens that kept the lower classes from rising above their station while simultaneously pulling the upper classes down.
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Claude Chabrol,
Dr. Mabuse,
Fritz Lang,
Jess Franco,
Norbert Jacques
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Wow. This blog of yours just keeps on getting better and better, now that I've found it. I'm researching a series of articles on characters like Fantomas, Dr. Mabuse, Fu Manchu, etc. and will definitely be linking to your wonderful Introductions. The Occult Case Book of Sherlock Holmes sounds fantastic. WE have to pick up a copy of Terror of Fu Manchu over the holidays...
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