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Nietzsche on Tragedy

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1. Note that N is investigating the origins of Greek (Attic) tragedy; but in ... of art is bound up with the duality of the Apolline and Dionysiac in much the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nietzsche on Tragedy


1
Nietzsche on Tragedy
  • The Birth of Tragedy
  • Ch. 1-3, 7, 12-15

2
  • 1. Note that N is investigating the origins of
    Greek (Attic) tragedy but in fact his book will
    also give an account of its death
  • and, then, of its possible re-birth in
    Wagners operas.

3
  • 2. Note that his account, in a way that parallels
    that of Aristotle, also traces the origins of
    poetry/tragedy to a fundamental human drive. In
    Ari, that was mimesis in N, it is the conflict
    between two opposing drives, which he names after
    two Greek gods Apollo and Dionysos.

4
  • Apollo god of, among other things, music, poetry
    and prophecy. He represents harmony, order and
    reason.
  • Dionysos god of wine, intoxication and
    ecstasy/frenzy.

5
  • Ns central thesis about tragedy, and its
    origin draws on this claim
  • that the continuous evolution of art is bound
    up with the duality of the Apolline and Dionysiac
    in much the same way as reproduction depends on
    there being two sexes (1, p.14)

6
  • The two Greek Gods, Apollo and Dionysos,
    represent an enormous opposition, both in origin
    and goals, between the Apolline art of the
    image-maker or sculptor, and the imageless art of
    music, which is that of Dionysos (p.14)

7
  • These two very different drives exist side by
    side, mostly in open conflict, stimulating and
    provoking one another to give birth to ever-new,
    more vigorous offspringuntil they finally
    engender a work of art which is Dionysiac and
    Apolline in equal measure Attic tragedy. (p.14)

8
  • In order to gain a closer understanding of these
    two drives, let us think of them in the first
    place as the separate art-worlds of dream and
    intoxication (p.14)
  • Apollo is the god of all image-making energies
    and of prophecy. (p.16)
  • He is the magnificent divine image of the
    principium individuationis (p.17)

9
  • In contrast, there is a certain horror which
    seizes people when they begin to lose faith in
    this principle.
  • AND, If we add to this horror the blissful
    ecstasy which arises from the innermost ground of
    man, indeed of nature itself, whenever this
    breakdown of the principium individuationis
    occurs, we catch a glimpse of the essence of the
    Dionysiac, which is best conveyed by the analogy
    of intoxication. (p.17)

10
  • These Dionysiac stirrings, which, as they grow
    in intensity, cause subjectivity to vanish to the
    point of complete self-forgetting, awaken either
    under the influence of narcotic drinkor at the
    approach of spring when the whole of nature is
    pervaded by lust for life. (p.17)

11
  • In the Dionysiac ecstasy, Man is no longer an
    artist, he has become a work of art all natures
    artistic power reveals itself here, amidst
    shivers of intoxication, to the highest, most
    blissful satisfaction of the primordial unity.
    (p.18)

12
Ch.2
  • How do these fundamental drives which N calls
    artistic powers which erupt from nature itself
    (p.19) how do they relate to the work of
    individual human artists?
  • First of all, everybody participates (or can) in
    these drives most easily in dream (Appoline)
    and ecstasy (Dionysiac).

13
  • N suggests that in the development of music, the
    two tendencies are clearly in conflict contrast
    between Apolline music (ordered, individual) and
    Dionysiac music which elicited terror and horror
    from them. (p.21)
  • In the Dionysiac dithyramb man is stimulated to
    the highest intensification of his symbolic
    powers something that he has never felt before
    urgently demands to be expressed the destruction
    of the veil of maya, one-ness as the genius of
    mankind, indeed of nature itself. (p.21)

14
Ch.3
  • But this Dionysiac drive was always there, below
    the surface of Apolline Greek culture we just
    need to know how to see it.
  • Even the Greek Olympian religion was nothing to
    do with asceticism, moral duty, spirituality,
    etc. In fact, everything here speaks only of
    over-brimming, indeed triumphant existence, where
    everything that exists has been deified,
    regardless of whether it is good or evil. (p.22)

15
  • The story of the encounter between Midas and
    Silenus
  • The very best thing is utterly beyond your
    reach not to have been born, not to be, to be
    nothing. However, the second best thing for you
    is to die soon (p.23)

16
  • The Greeks knew and felt the terrors and horrors
    of existence in order to live at all they had to
    place in front of these things the resplendent,
    dream-born figures of the Olympians. (p.23)
  • How else could that people have borne existence,
    given their extreme sensitivity, their stormy
    desires, their unique gift for suffering, if that
    same existence had not been shown to them in
    their gods, suffused with a higher glory? (23-24)

17
  • In Ch.5 on the aesthetic justification of
    existence
  • the whole comedy of art is certainly not
    performed for us, neither for our edification nor
    our education, just as we are far from truly
    being the creators of that world of art
    conversely, however, we may very well assume we
    are already images and artistic projections for
    the true creator of art, and that our highest
    dignity lies in our significance as works of art
    for only as an aesthetic phenomenon is
    existence and the world eternally justified
    (32-33).

18
Ch.7
  • So, what is the origin of tragedy? At one level,
    it is the tragic chorus tragedy arose from the
    tragic chorus and was originally chorus and
    nothing but chorus (p.36).
  • But, what is the significance of the chorus?

19
  • The introduction of the chorus was the decisive
    step by which war was declared openly and
    honestly on all naturalism in art. (38)
  • Tragedy grew up on this foundation, and for this
    very reason, of course, was relieved from the
    very outset of any need to copy reality with
    painful exactness. (p.39)

20
  • But, it is not unrelated to our reality. In fact
  • The metaphysical solace which, I wish to
    suggest, we derive from every true tragedy, the
    solace that in the ground of things, and despite
    all changing appearances, life is indestructibly
    mighty and pleasurable, this solace appears with
    palpable clarity in the chorus of satyrs, a
    chorus of natural beings whose life goes on
    ineradicably behind and beyond all civilisation
    (p.39)

21
  • Gazing into the suffering and destructive havoc
    of the world, the Greek audience is in danger of
    longing to deny the will as the Buddhist does.
    Art saves him, and through art life saves him
    for itself. (p.40)

22
  • The litany of suffering and destruction tends to
    make us give up on action, on will after all,
    whats the point of trying against such odds?
  • BUT Here, at this moment of supreme danger for
    the will, art approaches as a saving sorceress
    with the power to heal

23
  • Art alone can re-direct those repulsive thoughts
    about the terrible or absurd nature of existence
    into representations with which man can live
    these representations are the sublime, whereby
    the terrible is tamed by artistic means, and the
    comical, whereby disgust at absurdity is
    discharged by artistic means

24
  • The dithyrambs chorus of satyrs is the saving
    act of Greek art the attacks of revulsion
    described above spent themselves in contemplation
    of the intermediate world of these Dionysiac
    companions. (p.40)
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