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Syphilis, sin and the social order: Richard Wagner's Parsifal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2008

Extract

In the age of AIDS, few would be surprised to find sexuality connected to suffering and disease; in the age of syphilis – from its arrival in Europe in 1492 to today, when it is on the rise once again – the connection is equally strong, though many of us have forgotten this. The brief respite offered by the discovery of a cure for syphilis (through the use of penicillin) in the 1940s ended with the appearance of AIDS. Over the last five hundred years, the Christian reading of syphilis as the scourge of God directed against the sexually sinful has merged with societal sexual anxieties about the effects of syphilis on the general social fabric and, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, on the family in particular. The perhaps surprising focus of this discussion (by a literary theorist and a physician) of suffering and social decline in the context of sexually transmitted disease is Richard Wagner's last music drama, Parsifal, finally completed in 1882 and called a Bühnenweihfestspiel (a stage consecration festival play) for his Bayreuth theatre.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

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References

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54 Mann, 128. Mann was of course an expert in the representation of syphilis. In Doktor Faustus, the composer Adrian Leverkühn can be seen as a parodic anti-Parsifal who does not resist (indeed seeks out) the snares of the prostitute, Esmeralda, who admits to him that she has the disease. The novel contains long, detailed clinical descriptions of the stages of his syphilis. Like Parsifal, Doktor Faustus is a late work of its creator, and in both there are parallel concerns with Germany society in a state of decay and crisis, though different messages about the possibilities of redemption. But it is the intertextual linking of Kundry with the syphilitic prostitute in this reading of the novel that is particularly suggestive. See also Cicora, Mary A., ‘Wagner Parody in Doktor Faustus’, Germanic Review, 63 (1988), 133–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar