Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Wagner and the problematics of “absolute music” in the nineteenth century
- 2 Beethoven reception and the hermeneutic impulse: “poetic ideas” and new forms
- 3 Engendering music drama: Opera and Drama and its metaphors
- 4 The “poetic-musical period” and the “evolution” of Wagnerian form
- 5 Endless melodies
- 6 Motives and motivations: leitmotif and “symphonic” drama
- Appendix 1 The “poetic-musical period” (from Opera and Drama, Part III, section 3)
- Appendix 2 Principal writings of Richard Wagner cited in the text
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Wagner and the problematics of “absolute music” in the nineteenth century
- 2 Beethoven reception and the hermeneutic impulse: “poetic ideas” and new forms
- 3 Engendering music drama: Opera and Drama and its metaphors
- 4 The “poetic-musical period” and the “evolution” of Wagnerian form
- 5 Endless melodies
- 6 Motives and motivations: leitmotif and “symphonic” drama
- Appendix 1 The “poetic-musical period” (from Opera and Drama, Part III, section 3)
- Appendix 2 Principal writings of Richard Wagner cited in the text
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
It has long been customary to preface books on Wagner with apologies, and apologetics, for “yet another” – sometimes accompanied by vague comparative statistics about Jesus and Napoleon. Since these statistics (which have usually sounded suspiciously obsolete anyway) have been revealed as yet another mythical Wagnerian motif, and since the apology can by this point be taken as read, I shall concentrate briefly on the apologetics.
Until recently it could be said that Wagner's prose writings, after spawning a sizeable quantity of adulatory mystification in the days of the Bayreuther Blätter, the Revue Wagnérienne, or The Meister, and a more sinister if less exhaustive phase of exegesis over the next generation, had eventually succumbed to a state of near-total scholarly disregard (even if the fundamental articles of their musical-dramatic creed had since become sedimented into a universal critical consciousness). Over the last several decades the situation has changed, however. The same period that saw the critical and academic rehabilitation of Verdi and Rossini, across the 1960s and 70s, also witnessed a revival of serious critical interest in Wagner's literary oeuvre. (I am not proposing any secret, deep-structural link here, aside from the fact that this was a time of much academic rehabilitation in general.)
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Wagner's Musical ProseTexts and Contexts, pp. xi - xxPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995