Fr. 150.00

Philosophies of Richard Wagnercb

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Julian Young is Kenan Professor of Humanities at Wake Forest University. Klappentext In addition to being a great composer, Richard Wagner was also an important philosopher. Julian Young begins by examining the philosophy of art and society Wagner constructs during his time as a revolutionary anarchist-communist. Modernity, Wagner argued, is to be rescued from its current anomie through the rebirth of Greek tragedy (the original Gesamtkunstwerk) in the form of the "artwork of the future," an artwork of which his own operas are the prototype. Young then examines the entirely different philosophy Wagner constructs after his 1854 conversion from Hegelian optimism to Schopenhauerian pessimism. "Redemption" now becomes, not a future utopia in this world, but rather "transfigured" existence in another world, attainable only through death. Viewing Wagner's operas through the lens of his philosophy, the book offers often novel interpretations of Lohengrin, The Ring cycle, Tristan und Isolde, Die Meistersinger, and Parsifal. Finally, Young dresses the cause of Friedrich Nietzsche's transformation from Wagner's intimate friend and disciple into his most savage critic. Nietzsche's fundamental accusation, it is argued, is one of betrayal: that Wagner betrayed his early, "life affirming" philosophy of art and life in favor of "life-denial." Nietzsche's assertion and the final conclusion of the book is that our task, now, is to "become better Wagnerians than Wagner." Zusammenfassung Julian Young presents Richard Wagner as an important philosopher of art and life, first as a utopian anarchist-communist and then as a Schopenhauerian pessimist. Understanding Wagner’s philosophy is crucial to understanding his operas, as it is to understanding Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, and Heidegger. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I: Early WagnerChapter 1: The Way We are NowChapter 2: The Greek IdealChapter 3: The Death of ArtChapter 4: The Artwork of the Future: Exploratory QuestionsPart II Later WagnerChapter 5: SchopenhauerChapter 6: Wagner's Appropriation of SchopenhauerChapter 7: Wagner's Final ThoughtsEpilogue: Wagner and Nietzsche...

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