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Book Info |  |  |  enlarge picture
| Richard Wagner and the Anti-Semitic Imagination | | Author: | Marc A. Weiner | ISBN: | 0803297920 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | |  | | | |  | Book Review |  |  | Richard Wagner and the Anti-Semitic Imagination FROM THE PUBLISHER This book addresses one of the most hotly contested debates in contemporary cultural life: the question of how anti-Semitism figures in the operas of Richard Wagner. Until now, scholars have generally acknowledged Wagner's anti-Semitism but have argued that it is irrelevant to the operas themselves. Marc A. Weiner challenges that traditional view by asserting that anti-Semitism is a crucial, pervasive feature in Wagner's operas. Weiner argues that the operas exemplify and contribute to a vast collection of images that are patently anti-Semitic - and that were readily recognized as such by nineteenth-century German audiences. These images were associated particularly with the body. Through a careful examination of Wagner's music, libretti, and stage directions, Weiner reconstructs iconographies of corporeal images - iconographies of the eye, voice, smell, gait, and sexuality - that were essential to the operas and were "associated with anti-Semitism and the longing for an imagined German community."
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING Certainly the most important work on Wagner that I have read in the last decade. Paul Lawrence Rose
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