Nosferatu

Released in the shadow of the Treaty of Versailles, the hyperinflation of the Weimar Republic, and the lingering memory of a war that had industrialized death, Nosferatu (1922) reimagines the vampire narrative as a crisis of public health and spatial anxiety. This paper will explore how Murnau’s film displaces the traditional Gothic castle for a modern, bureaucratic city, how the vampire’s shadow becomes a weapon of psychological terror, and how the film’s tragic conclusion—the self-sacrifice of the heroine—reveals a deeply pessimistic view of agency in the modern world.

Unlike the claustrophobic, jagged alleys of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), Nosferatu ’s horror emerges from emptiness . The streets of Wisborg (a fictionalized Wismar) are eerily deserted, cobblestoned arteries devoid of community. The film’s most famous sequence—Orlok rising from his coffin in the ship’s hold—is preceded by shots of the abandoned ship drifting silently into port, its sails like skeletal wings. This is a landscape of post-war anomie. The population is present only in reaction shots of panic; they are a mass, not a society. Nosferatu

Orlok’s castle is not a romantic ruin but a place of unnatural stillness and vertiginous angles. The shot of Hutter (Gustav von Wangenheim) eating dinner while Orlok reads a contract at the opposite end of a table that seems to stretch infinitely foregrounds the horror of bureaucracy . The vampire is a landlord, a property owner, a signatory. The supernatural horror is thus grounded in the mundane anxieties of the petit-bourgeois employee—Hutter is sent to Transylvania by his boss, Knock, a real estate agent. The vampire’s invasion of Wisborg is not a mythical curse but a real estate transaction gone horribly wrong. Released in the shadow of the Treaty of

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