Mythology as metaphor : romantic irony, critical theory, and Wagner's Ring

Bibliographic Information

Mythology as metaphor : romantic irony, critical theory, and Wagner's Ring

Mary A. Cicora

(Contributions to the study of music and dance, no. 46)

Greenwood Press, 1998

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [161]-170) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This literary and critical approach to Wagner's Ring provides an original interpretation of the Ring tetralogy and challenges the standard political analyses of the work. The Ring is examined in the tradition of the Romantic drama as a reworking of Greek tragedy as theoretically expressed in the second part of Oper und Drama. In the Ring, using myth as a metaphor for history presents a paradoxical world. The innertextual reflection that Wotan performs in his monologue causes the Ring to self-destruct from within. He actually dismantles or deconstructs the text of the Ring. The doom of the gods happens because the Ring has undermined, unworked, and dismantled its system of signification. Studies of Wagner's theoretical writings and music-dramas have not emphasized aspects of his works within the tradition of German drama and aesthetic theory. This discussion of Wagner's revision of Greek tragedy in Oper und Drama, supplemented by an original interpretation of the Ring operas, places Wagner's writings within these realms. As a fresh interpretation of the Ring tetralogy, this valuable analysis will appeal to Wagner scholars and musicologists interested in Wagner's operas as well as to German cultural history and literary scholars.

Table of Contents

Preface Interpreting Wagner's Ring Wagner, Romantic Irony, and Mythology Mythology and Tragedy in Oper und Drama Mythology and Hermeneutics: The Ring as Romantic Drama Wotan's Monologue: Mythological Deconstruction Wagnerian Deconstruction? Selected Bibliography Index

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