Whatever may have led me individually here, I stand here now as one of the conquerors who, in the behalf of free labor and civilization, have usurped the dominion of the country from a weaker race. There is an old warfare between us and the Slavonic tribes; and we feel with pride that culture, industry, and credit are on our side.5
The Prussian-Polish provinces were, according to Freytag, the conquered lands, the place in which Germans tried out their notions of cultural and racial superiority. To uplift the inhabitants, to bring industry, and to secure German liberal interests were the main tenets of the novel. The story also exposes the anti-Polish and anti-Semitic views underpinning German liberal agendas on the verge of national unification.
This mission to civilize the Prussian-Polish provinces resonated strongly with representatives of the German medical profession. The poor sanitary conditions and the epidemics that constantly assailed the population were two powerful reasons that made the Prussian government invest in the modernization of the region throughout the second half of the nineteenth century. Although the transformations were relatively slow and brought on in great part by funds that France paid in compensation for the Franco-Prussian War, the provinces were the place in which many young German physicians launched their careers.6 The role of these physicians was not limited to curing the ills of the inhabitants, since many of them were attracted to the area as part of the Germanizing projects espoused by the Prussian state. A large number of them were promoters of German culture, local ethnographers, and government representatives. The benefits they received for fulfilling these roles put them in a special position of power, particularly in relation to Polish physicians and the general Polish-speaking population.
Nineteenth-century German medical literature echoed some of the images of chaos and danger regarding the eastern border and the Polish element as portrayed in Debit and Credit. The discursive overlap between these two sets of literature, fictional and scientific, illustrates the extent to which German colonial desires were disseminated and transferred to Polish and other Slavic populations in the borderlands. In her Colonial Fantasies: Conquest, Family, and Nation in Precolonial Germany, 1770–1870, Susanne Zantop uses the concept of “colonial fantasies” to describe how a German colonialist subjectivity emerged long before Germany’s actual possession of overseas colonies.7 I use a similar approach in this chapter to examine German colonial fantasies in the realms of literature and medicine, and the responses that an emergent class of Polish physicians gave to German colonialist views.
This chapter analyzes the colonial images and desires that Germans had regarding the Polish-speaking population since the late Enlightenment period to the mid-nineteenth century. It particularly studies the construction of Polish otherness in the context of two major epidemic diseases. The first was the typhus epidemic of 1848 in Upper Silesia, which prompted Germans to pay close attention to the question of Polish culture and ethnicity at a time when Germans were proposing several projects of national unification. The second one was the cholera epidemic of the 1860s and 1870s, which led to the establishment of the Office of Imperial Health in 1876. The chapter also looks into the political and cultural actions that Poles took to respond to German cultural advances and to confront the main health problems in the region.
Colonial Fantasy as Literary and Scientific Production
The Prussian-Polish provinces have been mainly approached in historical studies from the point of view of national and ethnic conflicts, without delving much into the ambiguities, desires, and paradoxes of identity formation in cross-cultural and multiethnic settings.8 In Debit and Credit, Freytag presents a multilayered account of the eastern borderlands that is useful when reflecting on notions of race, gender, ethnicity, and class at a time when the very premises of German identity and national unification were still being defined and debated. The novel provides different scenarios in which Germans could develop their national project and colonial influence. It also shows how concepts of Germanness were constantly defined against three main threats to an emerging German liberal program: Jews, German aristocrats, and Poles.9
Many scholars have pointed out that, in Debit and Credit, Freytag portrays the “German East” very much like the American “Wild West,” a place full of dangers where Germans could potentially lose their identity and women led rustic lives away from the domestic sphere. Although the author puts emphasis on German colonial intervention at home, in the Polish borderlands, the option of overseas colonization is also introduced in the novel. It is presented in the missionary desires of a character named Baumann, who dreams about moving to Africa one day, and in the adventurous spirit of Herr von Fink, who returns to the German lands after spending several years in the United States. Literary critics have paid more attention to Fink than to Baumann because of the prominent role he plays in the narrative, enabling them to study Freytag’s perceptions of the nobility and anti-Semitic views. However, the character can also be understood as a metaphor for German migration and their colonialization activities in the “wilderness” of North America and the consequences this migration could bring if redirected to the German East.10 The different colonial alternatives presented in the text show how Germans were engaged in colonial debates at the time and the important role colonial imaginaries played in shaping the German nation and cultural identities in the borderlands.
By depicting Anton as a diligent and honorable accountant, working in a company that imports colonial goods, Freytag favors German mercantilism over the outdated economic system of the nobility. Prussian Poland and overseas colonies are connected in the novel not only by the colonial images used to describe the Polish population and territories, but also by Anton’s own mercantile profession, administrative skills, and sense of being a Kulturträger (cultural bearer) in the region. Overseas colonialism, with all its imagined dangers, is implicitly presented in the novel as a path Freytag envisions as necessary for the strength of the German bourgeoisie and a unified Germany. In fact, later on in life the author of Debit and Credit became an advocate of German overseas possessions and an active member of the German Colonial Association (Deutschen Kolonialvereins). However, in the 1850s the eastern provinces, with a significant population of Polish-speaking subjects, posed immediate challenges to the project of national unity. The novel seems to propose that the Germans’ priority was to secure the eastern territories as a “race of colonists and conquerors.”11 It is precisely in light of the different colonial alternatives abroad and an emerging bourgeois class that the Prussian-Polish territories were reimagined in Freytag’s novel as the primary colonial realm for German subjects. In other words, prior to national unification, the provinces were the main place where Germans could rely on the state machinery to exert direct control over “foreign” populations and assert their cultural influence. Germany is symbolized in the novel as one great betrothal, not of Germans and Poles, but of Germans and bourgeois values—of Anton and the Schröter company for which he works. The colonial adventures that the main character faces in the east animate and affirm this unity.
To understand German colonial images of the eastern borderlands and Polish-German relations in the nineteenth century, one should begin by examining the ethnographic works of German intellectuals in the late Enlightenment period and their views of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The cultural experiences that many German Enlightenment intellectuals encountered in the borderlands were similar to those expressed by Freytag several decades later, and, to some extent, to Rudolf Virchow’s views of the local populations in Upper Silesia in the 1840s. The dissolution of the Polish territories as a political entity and the positioning of German subjects in a culturally liminal space in relation to Poles help explain these views. Many of the intellectuals who in one way or another constructed negative images of Poles during this period were born either in places close to the commonwealth or under the direct rule of Poles in the east. Expanding on the scholarly works about German and Polish relations in the Enlightenment period, this study argues that these early ethnographical and racial accounts of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth had major influences on how Germans interacted with Poles throughout the nineteenth century.12