Description
The Greek Music Drama marks a significant moment in the development of Nietzsche's thought. Delivered as a lecture in 1870, it was the first public articulation of the major themes of his later, philosophical work: the importance of aesthetic experience for culture, the primacy of the body and physiological drives, and the centrality of music to Greek tragedy. Nietzsche here repudiates abstract scholarly approaches to the art of classical antiquity, proposing instead that that art demands of us the cultivation of distinctive emotional and intellectual capacities.
While The Greek Music Drama was written on the brink of the insights that inform The Birth of Tragedy, it stands as a fascinating document in its own right. Paul Bishop's preface and informative critical notes and Jill Marsden's illuminating introduction serve to redress the comparative neglect that this seminal text-presented here in an elegant bilingual format-has suffered in Nietzsche studies. They also set in its original context a work that will prove essential to anyone interested in theater, performance, and the art of tragedy.
About the Author
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) was a German philosopher. Among his numerous groundbreaking works are The Birth of Tragedy, Beyond Good and Evil, and On the Genealogy of Morals.
Book Information
ISBN 9781916809635
Author Friedrich Nietzsche
Format Paperback
Page Count 116
Imprint ERIS
Publisher ERIS