"I write of love and death. What other subjects are there?" -Arthur Schnitzler
International literary icon Arthur Schnitzler is best known today for his 1926 novella Traumnovelle, the basis for Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut. This comprehensive 320-page biography reveals he was much more: a pioneering modernist whose unflinching examination of sex, power, and identity created a body of work that grows more urgent with each passing decade.
A Life of Passion, Tragedy, and Genius
Schnitzler was a Viennese physician-turned-writer, whose works were burned by the Nazis as "Jewish filth" in 1933, yet his legacy endures as one of modernism's essential voices.
This biography reveals the man behind the scandals: his tempestuous affair with actress Adele Sandrock, his complex marriage to singer Olga Gussmann, his relationship with writer Clara Katharina Pollaczek, and the devastating 1928 suicide of his daughter Lili-a loss that haunted him until his death in 1931.
What's Inside
- Five-part narrative biography spanning his formation as a reluctant doctor, breakthrough as Vienna's most controversial playwright, tumultuous marriage years, and final decade marked by late masterpieces and his daughter's tragic suicide
- Complete chronological bibliography of every major work with publication details and English translations
Why Schnitzler Matters Now
- He invented stream-of-consciousness in German literature-twenty-two years before James Joyce-with his revolutionary 1900 novella Leutnant Gustl
- His 1924 masterpiece Fräulein Else explores sexual coercion and consent with startling relevance to the #MeToo era
- His banned play Professor Bernhardi (1912) exposes institutional antisemitism with prophetic clarity as antisemitism rises globally today
- His scandalous Reigen (La Ronde) sparked riots in 1920 Berlin and remained banned for decades-yet its circular exploration of desire across social classes remains electrifying
- Traumnovelle (1926), the basis for Eyes Wide Shut, represents the pinnacle of his late style: psychological, erotic, and deeply unsettling
Perfect For
- Readers of literary biography (fans of Stefan Zweig, Joseph Roth, Robert Musil)
- Theater and film enthusiasts, especially admirers of Eyes Wide Shut
- Students of modernist literature and psychoanalytic theory
- Anyone interested in Vienna 1900, Habsburg history, or Jewish cultural history
- Readers seeking literature that speaks to contemporary issues of consent, power, and identity