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Vampire Contagion as a Forensic Fact
Author(s) -
Ádám Mézes
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
historical studies on central europe
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2786-0930
pISSN - 2786-0922
DOI - 10.47074/hsce.2021-1.07
Subject(s) - vampire , context (archaeology) , population , commission , economic justice , work (physics) , product (mathematics) , sociology , political science , history , media studies , law , literature , art , engineering , archaeology , mechanical engineering , demography , geometry , mathematics
The present article traces the creation of the peculiar concept of the vampiric contagion or “vampirization” through the work of two official commissions which investigated vampires in Habsburg Serbia in 1732. Even though the importance of the documents prepared by the commissions has been duly recognized in intellectual and cultural histories, a closer look at the narrower historical context yields additional insights into how the figure of the vampire was construed. This approach also helps us do justice to the work of the first commission, led by contagion physician Glaser, which usually receives undeservedly little attention in the secondary literature. While acknowledging the Habsburg cameralistic state administration’s efforts at controlling and disciplining the borderland’s population, the article seeks to interpret the vampire as a product of a contact zone, co-created by the local Orthodox population and the borderland’s medical administration.