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Chapter 11 - Wagner, Schopenhauer, and the World as a Phantasmagoria

from II - People

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2024

David Trippett
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

To illuminate the notion of ‘totality’ in Wagner’s conception of the ‘total art work’ or Gesamtkunstwerk, this chapter invokes Schopenhauer’s claim that ordinary life is like a phantasmagoria or dream – a claim that epitomises his interpretation of Kant’s theory of knowledge. The chapter associates the notion of a phantasmagoria with that of a dream, and the latter with the nineteenth-century conception of the unconscious, in particular as presented in Freud’s characterisation of dreams as multidimensional semantic expressions. Wagner’s operas are accordingly considered to be phantasmagorias in this dream-associated sense. Wagner is often appreciated as a forefather of modernism, but by recognising the phantasmagoric, semantically-multidimensional quality of his operas he can be seen further as a forefather of postmodernism.

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Wagner in Context , pp. 113 - 121
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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