Remembering Richard Wagner:
May 22, 1813–February 13, 1883
Posted By
Greg Johnson
On
In
North American New Right
| Comments Disabled
Richard Wagner was born 201 years ago today in Leipzig in the kingdom of Saxony. He died on February 13, 1883 in Venice. As an artist, intellectual, author, and cultural force, Wagner has left an immense metapolitical legacy, which is being evaluated and appropriated in the North American New Right. I wish to draw your attention to the following writings which have been published at Counter-Currents/North American New Right.
About Wagner
- Kerry Bolton, “Wagner as Metapolitical Revolutionary [2]”
- Collin Cleary, “Wagner’s Place in the Germanic Tradition,” Part 1 [3], Part 2 [4], Part 3 [5], Part 4 [6], Part 5 [7], Part 6 [8], Part 7 [9], Part 8 [10]
- Jef Costello, “Rage Against the Machine: A Very American Ring Cycle [11]”
- Gabriele D’Annunzio, “Tristan and Isolde [12]”
- James Holbeyfield, “Cosima Wagner (Behind Every Great Man . . .), Part 1 [13], Part 2 [14], Part 3 [15]
- Alexander Jacob, “The Aryan Christian Religion and Politics of Richard Wagner [16]”
- Greg Johnson, Review of Bryan Magee’s Aspects of Wagner [17]
- Greg Johnson, Review of Bryan Magee’s The Tristan Chord: Wagner and Philosophy [18]
- Emi Mann Kawaguchi, “Yukio Mishima and Richard Wagner: Art and Politics, or Love and Death [19]”
- Kurwenal, “Wagner, Nietzsche, and the New Suprahumanist Myth,” Part 1 [20], Part 2 [21], Part 3 [22]
- Sir Oswald Mosley, “The Meaning of Wagner’s Ring [23]”
- James J. O’Meara, “My Wagner Problem — and Ours [24]”
- Christopher Pankhurst, “Parsifal and the Possibility of Transcendence [25]”
- Brenton Sanderson, “Evil Genius: Constructing Wagner as Moral Pariah,” Part 1 [26], Part 2 [27], Part 3 [28], Part 4 [29]
- Deems Taylor, “The Monster [30]” (Portuguese translation here [31])
- Richard Widmann, “Never Surrender: Wagner on War and Culture [32]”
Relevant to Wagner:
- Jonathan Bowden, “Hans-Jürgen Syberberg: Leni Riefenstahl’s Heir? [33]”
- Gregory Hood, “Revolution from the Periphery: The Lessons of Nueva Germania [34]”
- Greg Johnson, Review of The Genius of Valhalla: The Life of Sir Reginald Goodall [35]
- Greg Johnson, “Sir Reginald Goodall: An Apprecation [36]”
- James J. O’Meara, “Our Wagner, Only Better: Harry Partch, Wild Boy of American Music,” Part 1 [37]