On Thursday, February 28, 2013 5:04:54 PM UTC, Kurnewal wrote:
> One extra note: In this forum there has been advanced the notion that Wagner, not much of a Christian, in Parsifal used Christianity to symbolise a more universalist ethos, giving the public his philosophy of compassion filtered through a mythology they could understand. He even started and abandoned a Buddhist opera once, and perhaps Parsifal is the Buddhist opera brought to completion under a veil of Christian symbolism. After all, he doesn't mention Christ's name once. I apologize that I forget the name of the commenter and do not have the time to wade through the mass of spam to recover it.
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It could have been any of us. This is fairly widely accepted -- if not necessarily agreed with -- in scholarly analysis.
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> All that was hard to believe here, with the repeated returns to references to the Savior, the Grail, the Blood, the Flesh, the blood in the Grail Chalice refreshed by drops of Amfortas's blood, the Cross, how he died for our sins, drink my blood, eat my flesh, Good Friday, more blood, and on and on and on. It would seem that if Christianity here were a translucent cover, it would not need to be so concrete, specific, repeated and, yes, blood-laden.
Remember that the Grail is only not accepted Christian doctrine or thought, it's merely a legendary corpus that now happens to tap into the original Christian legend, without in any way being legitimized by them. In fact, very shortly before Wagner's main source, it was still a thoroughly pagan story, with the Graal a stone rather than a chalice, and a pagan cornucopia produing very material sustenance. It makes free use of Christian imagery without being in the slightes bit Christian.
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> My own opinion is that Christianity is here evoked as a myth which can work powerfully on the artist's audience, who are steeped in it to a greater extent than they are in the Norse myths. He has rewritten the myth in his own terms, much as he did the Norse myths, generalized it and here paralleled it with a new hero. But I think he means in the rewriting to have it resonate on a deeper level, to give society the religious experience through art that is lacking in the modern churches, rather than to have it stand for a different myth or set of myths. The overarching message of pity and compassion can after all be drawn out of a rewritten Christianity directly rather than out of Buddhism filtered through Christianity.
Going to think about this one, as my brain has been bent by a long days' writing!
Cheers,
Mike