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Elisabeth Bronfen is a Swiss-American literary scholar, cultural theorist, and professor of English and American Studies at the University of Zurich. She is best known for her work on gender, trauma, and the Gothic.
Born on April 23, 1958, in Zurich, Switzerland, Bronfen earned her PhD in English and American Literature from the University of Zurich in 1986. She has held teaching positions at the University of Zurich, the University of Basel, and the University of Konstanz.
Bronfen is the author of several books, including Over Her Dead Body: Death, Femininity and the Aesthetic (1992), The Knotted Subject: Hysteria and Its Discontents (1998), and Night Passages: Narrative and Memory in Postwar Austria (2004). She has also edited several collections of essays, including The Anatomy of Horror: The Masters of Occult Fiction (1995) and The Turn of the Screw: Annotated and Explained (2005).
Bronfen is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. She has received numerous awards, including the Swiss National Science Foundation's Advanced Researcher Award in 2000 and the Swiss Grand Award for Art and Science in 2006.
As of 2021, Elisabeth Bronfen's net worth is estimated to be approximately $1 million.
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Elisabeth Bronfen Height, Weight & Measurements
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Elisabeth Bronfen Net Worth
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Elisabeth Bronfen's net worth
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
In 2017, Elisabeth Bronfen's collection of essays in visual culture Crossmappings (2009) will appear in English. Therein, Bronfen proposes a reading method of the same name that is based on mapping and comparing formal aspects of cultural texts such as character constellations or political themes. According to Bronfen, this method allows for new insights into both the earlier and the later text. Rolf Löchel calls crossmapping a comparative method that not only uncovers intertextualities but also carves out similar concerns of texts from different media such as literature, cinema, television and painting. Amongst others, Bronfen crossmaps Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s novella The Yellow Wallpaper with the photographic oeuvre of Francesca Woodman, pop art with Baz Luhrmann’s Shakespeare adaption Romeo + Juliet, as well as Shakespeare’s Henriad with David Simon’s The Wire. In her teaching, Elisabeth Bronfen has further crossmapped Macbeth with Beau Willimon’s House of Cards and traced the rewritings of A Midsummer Night's Dream in Hollywood from Max Reinhardt’s 1935 adaption via George Cukor’s The Philadelphia Story and Howard Hawks’ The Big Sleep to Susan Seidelman’s Desperately Seeking Susan.
Mad Men, Death and the American Dream (2015) is an analysis of Matthew Weiner’s award-winning TV show Mad Men. According to Bronfen, the show not only successfully revives the past, but also comments on the state of the US nation and the role of the American Dream in the 20th century.
In Specters of War (2012), Bronfen analyses how Hollywood cinema and American television come to terms with US military history. From the "unfinished business" of civil war in Gone with the Wind and Gangs of New York to the "choreography of battle" in Saving Private Ryan and Band of Brothers, Bronfen investigates the parallels between military and cinematic spectacle.
In Night Passages (2008/2013), Bronfen traces night as a trope from William Shakespeare through 19th-century realism to film noir and links the nocturnal to the primordial darkness that existed before the advent of in western culture’s "mythic narratives."
Home in Hollywood (1999/2004) is an analysis of the portrayal of psychological processes in film classics such as Rebecca, The Wizard of Oz, and The Searchers. In particular, Bronfen traces the depiction of the Freudian Uncanny in these films. Her main thesis is that a "knowledge of the uncanniness of existence" remains visible in these movies despite their attempts of making sense of reality by giving the viewers a metaphorical home in the cinematic world.
In The Knotted Subject (1998), Bronfen relates the "elusive, protean, and enigmatic psychosomatic disorder" of hysteria to cultural works by Ann Raddcliffe, Anne Sexton, Alfred Hitchcock, David Cronenberg, and Cindy Sherman. In her analysis, the human navel serves as a metaphor for both connection and detachment that is linked to the eponymous knotted subject of the hysteric because it too stems from a knot.
In Over Her Dead Body (1992), Bronfen presents death as a fundamental deficit that is often negotiated over female bodies (be they dead or alive) in Western societies, citing Wuthering Heights, Frankenstein, and Vertigo. The literary and/or visual representation of death can therefore be read as a symptom of western culture, in which the female body epitomizes the Other whose death is imagined culturally.
Elisabeth Bronfen studied German, English and Comparative literature at Radcliffe College and Harvard. From 1985 until 1992, she worked as an assistant at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and wrote her doctorate on Dorothy Richardson's Pilgrimage novels. Bronfen has held a chair at the University of Zurich since 1993, where she wrote her habilitation Over Her Dead Body (1992).
Elisabeth Bronfen (born 23 April 1958 in Munich) is a Swiss/German/American literary and cultural critic and academic. She is a professor and chairholder for English literature at the University of Zurich as well as a global distinguished professor at New York University. Her research interests include 19th- and 20th-century American and British literature, gender studies, psychoanalysis as well as the intersection and interaction between different cultural media.