'Rebecca Thomas has assembled a highly competent group of twenty-two scholars to explore the themes of crime and madness in Austria as expressed in myth, metaphor, and cultural reality. This significant anthology is a multi-disciplinary, multi-perspectival compendium of salient approaches to the overriding topic and draws upon literature, art, music, film, history, sociology, psychology, medicine, law, and women's and gender studies in presenting a collage of rewarding information. These individual scholars fill in critical elements of the large mosaic that this overarching topic incorporates. Concentrating on content and contexts emerging within Austria from the latter 19th century to the present day, the articles are grouped thematically under subheadings that Thomas nimbly outlines in her introduction. The volume offers anyone seriously interested in Austria and its culture or in comparative studies of the themes of crime and madness in diverse ramifications a fascinating and valuable resource that is undeniably relevant, highly informative, and intellectually enlightening.' - Paul F. Dvorak, Professor of German, Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia.'Crime and madness are not particular to Austria, of course, but Austria seems to be the small world in which the great one holds its rehearsals (Elfriede Jelinek, 'The Forsaken Place,' 2008). Crime and Madness in Modern Austria is an excellent scholarly volume on the discourse of experiences outside normality and beyond sanity, and on a large variety of artistic representations. The book's sixteen well-researched articles range from the second half of the 19th century and Fin-de-Siècle Vienna to WWII and the postwar era, and into the present time. Written by American and European scholars they offer a wide variety of thought-provoking discussions on Adalbert Stifter, Sigmund Freud, Robert Musil, and Alban Berg, Rosa Mayreder, Veza and Elias Canetti and contemporary writers such as Marlene Streeruwitz, Peter Handke, Thomas Bernhard, and the filmmaker Michael Haneke. This book is a vast resource for scholars and for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in Austrian, German and comparative literature seminars.' - Margarete Lamb-Faffelberger, Professor of German, Lafayette College.