Paul Scheerbart

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  304

  LIGHT

  The Great Light: A Münchhausen Breviary

  Ghost Castles: A Light Haunting

  The Light Club of Batavia: A Ladies’ Novelette

  The Incomprehensible Sun: A Seal Story

  Light Miracle

  The Black Night

  Laughing Giraffes: A Shadow Play

  305

  GLASS

  The Glass Monstrosity

  The Magnetic Mirror

  At the Glass Exhibition in Peking: The Old Baron’s Diary Entries

  Glass Architecture

  The Glass Sphere: A Solar-Ring Novelette

  The Clear Head: A Rosette

  Flora Mohr: A Glass Flower Story

  306

  MUSIC AND DANCE

  The Fried Flounder:

  A Dance-Poem of “Profound” Orientation

  Never Before Seen! A Romantic Symbolist Song

  The Old Dervishes: A Parable

  Dancing Plants — Dancing Forests

  The New Ballerina: A Tragic Pantomime

  The Meadow of Earthly Delights: A Friendship Song

  Clean! Clean! A Crown Song

  Sawiga, the Loving Fairy: A Song of Reconciliation

  The New Concert House

  Hey! Dance with Me! A Daydream

  Secrets: A Pantomime without Music

  Sophie: A Marriage Pantomime with Music and Dance

  Far! Far! A Love Song

  307

  WHILE DRINKING

  Hangover Poetry

  Morning Notes

  Hop! Hop! Hop!

  I Have an Eye . . .

  My Ink Is My Ink: A Blotosophicum

  Delirium! Delirium! A Decadent Tableau

  Bottoms Up: A Fantastical Royal Novel

  The Little Fly: A Winter Idyll

  Smoke and Fumes: A Night Piece

  The Greedy One

  Loscha: A Resignation Fantasy

  Holy Crap!

  The Curious One

  Kikakokú! Ekoraláps!

  Lompûschek: A Vision of a Loafer

  The Seventeeen Cusps or The Square of the Ellipsoid

  Brüllmeyer’s Treasure: The Tiny Fortress: Head Vignette

  The Uncleared Table: A Conundrum

  308

  A Sensible Motto

  Oh, That’s Right!

  Singing Snakes

  A Drunken Dream

  The Roast Pigeon

  The Worm

  You Are with Me? An Alcoholic Dream

  Bring Me Wine! A Despotic Piece

  The Vulture: Portrait of a Temperament

  The Wicked Fel ow: A Villainous Silhouette

  He Was Vexed: An Irritable Tiger

  Brilliant Intoxication: A Dream

  The World Is a Cowshed! A Hangover Scene

  309

  POLITICIANS

  Something Must Be Done . . .

  Rakkóx the Billionaire: A Boastful Novel

  Huge!

  Oceanic Fortune: A Grotesque

  The Satirical Magazine Editors

  The Baron as Organizer: A Factory Story

  The Downside of Work

  The Future Revolutions: A Sylvan Story

  The Dependent Ones

  The Furious Hedgehog: Wisdom Idyll

  The Earth’s Commodities: A Power Amusement

  The End of Barbarian Revolutionary Garb

  The Ruby Chamber: A Luxury Novelette

  General von Baz: An Airborne Amusement

  The Dangerous Millionaires

  The Good King: A Cloister Story

  Temples and Palaces: Babylonian Court Novelette

  Audience with the King: Assyrian Morning Idyll

  310

  Fresh Human Meat: A Contemporary Proposal

  Two World Creators: Sketch

  The World of Iron: A Loud Grumbling

  Red as a Crab! A Gentlemen’s Scherzo

  The Hooligan Angel: A Nihilist Prank

  The Gallant Robber or The Pleasant Manner: A Garden Scherzo

  Münchhausen in African Slavery: A Story in Letter Form

  The Workers of the Future

  The Swindled Witch: A Capital Joke

  The Fanatical Mayor: Cosmic Drama in Four Acts

  The Genteel Robber Chief: A Stage Entertainment in Three Acts

  The Silent Game of Courtly Society

  The Roasted Ant: A Labor Amusement

  Potentatehood and Secret Police

  The Jolly Robbers: A Play in Five Acts

  The Roots of Prosperity: A Simpleton Play in Five Acts

  The Comfortable Society

  The Giant’s Work: Philantropic Titanomachy

  The Jackpot: A Capitalist Fairy Tale

  311

  PROPHESY AND OUTRAGE

  Laughing Is Prohibited . . .

  Human Blood: A Social Fable

  The Great Battle: A Dualisticum

  The Development of Aerial Militarism and the Demobilization of

  the European Ground Forces, Fortresses, and Naval Fleets

  Humor as the Elixir of Life: An Anamitic Story

  The Rough Path: A Brutality Farce

  A Modern Kassandra: A Story of the Future

  Professor Grobleben on the “World War”

  Militarism in the Time of Revolution: A Debate for Generals

  Flying Dynamite: Department Store Novelette

  The Idols Are Growing Old: A Misery Tableau

  Not Laughing Anymore? Wel ?

  A Dangerous Invention

  We, the True, Great People!

  The Sport of Stripping-Bombing

  Who Is Killing Them? A Society Fable

  Of People Who Lost Their Heads: Palmyran Torch Dance Novelette

  Satirist Burnt at the Stake

  312

  GHOSTS

  Liwûna and Kaidôh: A Novel of Souls

  The Great-Grandmother: A Tragicomedy in One Act

  Ghost Dance: A Motion Study

  The Realm of Eternal Torment

  The Love of Souls: A Spiritualistic Scene from a Novel

  Question Mark: An Immortality Capriccio

  Laughing Ghosts: A Play Between Black Wal s

  313

  HOPE

  Audacious: A Morning Study

  The Broken Windowpane: A Mournful Mood

  Among Wild Animals: A Story of Despair

  In All Seriousness!

  Air Jellyfish: Story of a Discovery

  The World Is Loud . . .

  That Way!

  Nightmares: A Tormented Mood

  Banner Song of the Neoanarchists

  The Great Longing

  Question Mark: An Immortality Capriccio

  The Miracle: A Dramatic Scene

  Be Gentle and Scornful! A Character Cycle

  Fire Flowers: A Ruins Amusement

  The Good Sheep: An Exhausting Poem

  The Ocean Sanatorium for Hay Fever: A Telegram Novelette

  The New Abyss: A Transformation Novelette

  The Roast Pigeon: Legend of a Painter

  The Boldest Ones: An Emancipation Novelette

  314

  PERPETUALLY FAR AWAY

  Gal ery of the Beyond

  Perpetual Motion: The Story of an Invention

  Lesabéndio: An Asteroid Novel

  Behind the Mountains of Resentment: A Prose Rondel

  The Journey to the Beyond: A Speculator’s Novelette

  Laughing Gods: Novelette of the Future

  The World Perishes: A Tableau

  315

  Josiah McElheny, Scheerbart Hand-Colors Taut’s Stairway to the Exhibition Room, 2014.

  Drawing with retouching pencil on silver gelatin photograph, 20 × 16 inches.

  Credits

  Cover: Illustration by Ottomar Starke, from the first edition of Das Perpetuum Mobile: Die Geschichte

  einer Erfindung (Perpetual Motion: The Story of an Invention) by Paul Scheerbart (Leipzig: Ernst

  Rowohlt Ve
rlag, 1910).

  Page 10: Münchner Stadtmuseum, Sammlung Fotografie, Archiv Kester

  Page 21: Collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York

  Pages 27 and 79: Josiah McElheny, Three Screens for Looking at Abstraction(detail), 2012. Aluminum,

  low-iron mirror, projection cloth, film transferred to video (variable program), video projectors

  with stands, wood and metal hardware, dimensions variable. Page 27 photograph by Mark

  Steele; page 79 photograph by Charles Mayer Photography

  Pages 39, 86, and 91: Josiah McElheny, The Alpine Cathedral and the City-Crown (detail), 2007.

  Handblown molded glass, metal, wood, metal hardware, Plexiglas, and mechanically animated

  colored lighting system, 168 × 96 × 117 inches. Photographs by Robin Holland

  Pages 46–47: Josiah McElheny, Bruno Taut’s Monument to Socialist Spirituality (After Mies van der

  Rohe) (detail), 2009. Handblown molded glass, wood, and metal hardware, 1053⁄4 × 75 × 55

  inches. Photograph by Jason Mandella

  Page 58: Josiah McElheny, Crystalline Landscape After Hablik and Luckhardt III (detail), 2011.

  Handblown molded glass, colored sheet glass laminated to low-iron mirror, two-way mirror,

  glass diffuser, electric lighting, birch plywood and steel display structure, 56 × 57 × 30 inches.

  Photograph by Tom Van Eynde

  Page 69: Josiah McElheny, Model for a Film Set (The Light Spa at the Bottom of a Mine) (detail),

  2008. Handblown molded glass, painted cement, mortar, and wood, 37 × 68 × 371⁄2 inches.

  Photograph by Jason Mandella

  Pages 93, 99, 106, 108–109, 110, 112, 113, 115, 116,122, 265, 266, 273: Baukunstarchive, Akademie

  der Künste, Berlin

  Page 115: Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal

  Pages 131, 134, 138, 141: Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Columbia University

  Pages 144, 147: Archive Marzona, Berlin. Photograph Marcus Schneider, Berlin

  Pages 211, 224, 226, 228, 232–33, 244–45, and 249: Josiah McElheny, silver gelatin photograms from

  handblown, ground and polished glass, 2014, 11 × 14 inches. Page 211: Scheerbart’s Diagrams

  for Perpetual Motion Machine Number 1 (detail) ; page 224: Scheerbart’s Diagrams for Perpetual

  Motion Machine Number 6 (detail); page 226: Scheerbart’s Diagram for Perpetual Motion Machine

  Number 10 (detail); page 228: Scheerbart’s Diagram for Perpetual Motion Machine Number 11

  (detail); pages 232–33: Scheerbart’s Diagram for Perpetual Motion Machine Number 13 (detail);

  pages 244–45: Scheerbart’s Diagram for Perpetual Motion Machine Number 19 (detail); page

  249: Scheerbart’s Diagram for Perpetual Motion Machine Number 26 (detail).

  Page 255: Kurt Wolff Archive, Yale Collection of German Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and

  Manuscript Library, Yale University

  Page 262: Archive Marzona, Berlin. Photograph Marcus Schneider, Berlin

  Page 274: Akademie der Künste, Berlin, Walter Benjamin Archiv, WBA Ms 836

  Pages 290, 286–95: Archive Marzona, Berlin. Photograph Marcus Schneider, Berlin

  318

  Acknowledgments

  First, our gratitude to Paul Scheerbart himself, our inspiration, for being

  so big. A special thanks to: John A. Stuart, translator of The Gray Cloth by

  Scheerbart, without his book, this edition would never have been started.

  We thank our many collaborators for their tireless work on this proj-

  ect: Susan Bernofsky and Anne Posten for their new translations; Jason

  Burch and Mark Shortliffe for extensive work on the images; Susan

  Bielstein, Anthony Burton, Ruth Goring, Helen Graves, and Margaret

  Mahan for extensive (and sympathetic) editing and literary guidance;

  Purtill Family Business and Conny Purtill for the hand-drawn cover

  lettering and other aspects of the design; finally, our gratitude to Laura

  at Laura Lindgren Design, for editorial and translation support, design,

  layout, and composition, and the magic of bringing the book together.

  We could not have laid out this history without the help of these

  fantastic (and generous) scholars: Rosemarie Haag Bletter for her bound-

  less knowledge of historical dates and Scheerbart’s oeuvre; Hollyamber

  Kennedy for bringing the Frühlicht Glass House Letters to our attention;

  Noam Elcott for discovering the architecture of the kaleidoscope; Chris

  Turner for making Scheerbart both strange and not; Gary Indiana for

  placing Scheerbart within the history of letters and humor; Guy Maddin

  for reminding us of the cinematic nature of Perpetual Motion and Bill

  Horrigan, for incisive commentary on Guy Maddin’s work and writing;

  Hubertus von Amelunxen for his knowledge of and introductions to the

  archives of the Akademie der Künste, Berlin, and the collection of Egidio

  Marzona; and Egidio Marzona himself for sharing his memories and

  allowing us access to his unparalleled collection of Scheerbart material.

  For their expert assistance with historical documents and their respective

  collections, thanks to Dr. Petra Alprecht of the Baukunstarchiv, Akademie

  der Künste, Berlin; Louise Désy and Caroline Dagbert of the Canadian

  Centre for Architecture, Montréal; Jason Escalante and Janet S. Parks at

  the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Columbia University; Nancy

  Kuhl and Kevin Repp at the Beinecke Library, Yale University; and Dr.

  Erdmut Wizisla from the Walter Benjamin Archive, Berlin.

  With special thanks to William Wegman and Susanne DesRoches for

  their unflagging support whenever we were off in the uncharted wilds

  of Scheerbartland, and in gratitude to Donald Young for encouraging

  and inspiring our collaboration. We are all Scheerbartians now.

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