Bruges-la-Morte: Georges Rodenbach
Written in the 1890s- and very fin de siecle- very school of Huysmans- Bruges-la-Morte is yet another story about a man who kills a woman; and of course like all the other stories about men who kill women it's about him- not her- and the sufferings of his noble soul. More interestingly, it's a story about Bruges, with the man being a projection of the city or the city a projection of the man; take your pick. Rodenbach got people interested in Bruges- in his day a silted up port town full of gloomy catholics - and it's partly thanks to him that it's no longer Bruges-la-Morte but the cheery, cosmopolitan, tourist town we know today.
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There was a time in my life when I contemplated learning German, just to read Herman Hesse.
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I envy people with a gift for languages. I once contemplated learning Italian in order to read Dante. I didn't get very far.
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Is this like a literary precedent for the film In Bruges?
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One film that may well have been influenced by Bruges-la-Morte (in a roundabout way) is Hitchcock's Vertigo- which is based on a novel that borrows elements of Rodenbach's plot.