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Hoffmann is the unrivalled master of the uncanny in literature. His novel, Die Elixire des Teufels, contains a whole mass of themes to which one is tempted to ascribe the
uncanny effect of the narrative; but it is too obscure and intricate a story for us
to venture upon a summary of it. Towards the end of the book the reader is told
the facts, hitherto concealed from him, from which the action springs; with
the result, not that he is at last enlightened, but that he falls into a state of
complete bewilderment. The author has piled up too much material of the same
kind. In consequence one’s grasp of the story as a whole suffers, though not the
impression it makes. We must content ourselves with selecting those themes of
uncanniness which are most prominent, and with seeing whether they too can
fairly be traced back to infantile sources. These themes are all concerned with the
phenomenon of the ‘double’, which appears in every shape and in every degree
of development. Thus we have characters who are to be considered identical
because they look alike. This relation is accentuated by mental processes leaping
from one of these characters to another - by what we should call telepathy -, so
that the one possesses knowledge, feelings and experience in common with the
other. Or it is marked by the fact that the subject identifies himself with
someone else, so that he is in doubt as to which his self is, or substitutes the
extraneous self for his own. In other words, there is a doubling, dividing and
interchanging of the self. And finally there is the constant recurrence of the
same thing - the repetition of the same features or character-traits or
vicissitudes, of the same crimes, or even the same names through several consecutive
generations.