%0 Book %A Abigail Dunn %D 2013 %C Oxford, United Kingdom %I Peter Lang Verlag %@ 1094-6233 %@ 9783035304879 %T Virtuous Victim or Sexual Predator? %B The Representation of the Widow in Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century German Fiction %R 10.3726/978-3-0353-0487-9 %U https://www.peterlang.com/document/1052478 %X ‘Was ist eine Witwe mehr als … ein aufgewärmtes Essen?’ According to politician and statesman Theodor Gottlieb von Hippel (1741-1796), widows were superfluous beings and second-hand goods, but they were also perceived by theologians and moralists of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as a threat due to their sexual experience and supposedly ungovernable lust. This book analyses the overwhelmingly negative portrayal of the widow in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century German fiction. Male writers in the works discussed repeat the theory that, once deprived of their husbands, widows become sexually voracious. Indeed, the widow is often presented as a dangerous sexual predator who is prone to violence. Female authors, however, highlight the invisibility of the widow and portray her as a figure alienated from society and her family because she has internalized the ideas propounded by Hippel. The widow is depicted throughout as a figure to be at best re-educated and at worst to be feared and guarded against. %K sexual experience, lust, violence %G English