Consolations of History: Themes of Progress and Potential in Richard Wagner’s Gotterdammerung

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Alexander Shapiro
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Beautiful Soul
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Genus Homo
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Gesammelte Schriften Und Dichtungen
Gotterdammerung
Hegelian theory
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intellectual history
Johann Gustav Droysen
Mathilde Wesendonk
Maximilien Robespierre
music and philosophy
music history
Napoleon III
nineteenth-century philosophy
nineteenth-century theories of progress
opera
opera analysis
opera studies
philosophy
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Richard Wagner
Romantic music
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Schopenhauer critique
Schopenhauer's philosophy
spirituality
The Ring of the Nibelungen
Theatre & Performance Studies
Wagner Ring progress interpretation
Welt Als Wille Und Vorstellung
World Historical Individuals
World history
Wotan's Spear
Wotan’s Spear
Young Germany Movement
Young Hegelian
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032087993
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In this book on Richard Wagner’s compelling but enigmatic masterpiece Götterdämmerung, the final opera of his monumental Ring tetralogy, Alexander H. Shapiro advances an ambitious new interpretation which uncovers intriguing new facets to the work’s profound insights into the human condition. By taking a fresh look at the philosophical and historical influences on Wagner, and critically reevaluating the composer’s intellectual worldview as revealed in his own prose works, letters, and diary entries, the book challenges a number of conventional views that continue to impede a clear understanding of this work’s meaning. The book argues that Götterdämmerung, and hence the Ring as a whole, achieves coherence when interpreted in terms of contemporary nineteenth-century theories of progress, and, in particular, G.W.F. Hegel’s philosophies of mind and history.

A central target of the book is the article of faith that has come to dominate Wagner scholarship over the years – that Wagner’s encounter in 1854 with Arthur Schopenhauer’s philosophy conclusively altered the final message of the Ring from one of historical optimism to existential pessimism. The author contends that Schopenhauer’s uncompromising denigration of the will and denial of the possibility for human progress find no place in the written text of the Ring or in a plausible reading of the final musical setting. In its place, the author discovers in the famous Immolation Scene a celebration of mankind’s inexhaustible capacity for self-improvement and progress. The author makes the further compelling case that this message of progress is communicated not through Siegfried, the traditional male hero of the drama, but through Brünnhilde, the warrior goddess who becomes a mortal woman. In her role as a battle-tested world-historical prophet she is the true revolutionary change agent of Wagner’s opera who has the strength and vision to comprehend and thereby shape human history.

This highly lucid and accessible study is aimed not only at scholars and researchers in the fields of opera studies, music and philosophy, and music history, but also Wagner enthusiasts, and readers and students interested in the history and philosophy of the nineteenth century.

Alexander H. Shapiro is a practicing lawyer and independent scholar based in New York, U.S. His published works include “McEwan and Forster: The Perfect Wagnerites” in The Wagner Journal (2011), and “‘Drama of an Infinitely Superior Nature’: Handel’s Early English Oratorios and the Religious Sublime” in Music & Letters (1993).

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