@article{Feldhaus2021, author = {Feldhaus, Stephan}, title = {„Wir Nichtgnostiker": Die Hitler-Engelhardt-Parallele in Christian Krachts Imperium}, series = {arcadia}, volume = {56}, journal = {arcadia}, number = {2}, issn = {1613-0642}, doi = {10.1515/arcadia-2021-9028}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-248935}, pages = {183 -- 203}, year = {2021}, abstract = {In 2012 Georg Diez provoked a literary scandal with his review of Christian Kracht's novel Imperium. Since then, almost ninety informed studies which show an ongoing academic interest in the book have been published. Many of these studies attempted to explain the apparently failing analogy between Hitler and Engelhardt that the novel claimed in an irritating manner. Nevertheless, none of them took an esoteric approach which Kracht himself suggested in an interview with Denis Scheck as a starting point for their analyses, although esoteric references seem to be an ignored constant in Kracht's oeuvre since Tristesse Royale. Hence, by tracing this esoteric intertextuality in the whole of Kracht's oeuvre and linking it to the references which Kracht makes to right-wing ideologies since Faserland, it will be shown that there actually does exist an analogy between Hitler and Engelhardt in Imperium which aims to deconstruct Hitler mythemes by ridiculizing Engelhardt. Furthermore, it will be demonstrated that the interrelations between Kracht's texts create a rhizomatic network of intertextuality that dissolves the boarders between external references and self-references.}, language = {de} }