Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 October 2009
In his first book, The Birth of Tragedy (1872), Nietzsche presents the tragic art of fourth-century Greece as a religious festival which gathered the community together as community in the presence of its divinities. And he further argues that without a religion which both unites a culture and provides answers to the fundamental existential questions faced by all individuals, society decays. So, he concludes, the hope for a redemption of modernity from the decadence – the dis-integration – into which it has fallen, lies in the rebirth of Greek tragedy promised by Richard Wagner's projected Bayreuth Festival.
Two features distinguish this early thinking. First, it is communitarian thinking in the sense that the highest object of its concern is the flourishing of the community as a whole. And second, it is religious thinking in that it holds that without a festive, communal religion, a community – or, as Nietzsche frequently calls it, a ‘people’ – cannot flourish, indeed cannot properly be said to be a community.
This book originated in the question: what happened to this early religious communitarianism in Nietzsche's later works? What happened to Nietzsche's ‘Wagnerianism’?
In 1876 two people departed, as if in panic, midway through the first Bayreuth Festival. One was poor, ‘mad’ King Ludwig, Wagner's patron, and the other was Friedrich Nietzsche. After his flight, Nietzsche turned from being Wagner's ardent disciple to being his most virulent critic. But what was it that he rejected?
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