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Adorno, Schubert, and Mimesis

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2014
Authors
Jeremić-Molnar, Dragana
Molnar, Aleksandar
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
In Aesthetic Theory Adorno refers to Schubert as "the mimic par excellence." The connection between Adomo's conception of mimesis and his notion of Schubert has remained unexplored. In his essays "Schubert" and "Franz Schubert: Grand Rondo in A Major for Piano Four-Hands, op. 107" Adomo developed concepts and drew conclusions about Schubert's formal procedures that had a formative influence on his later understanding of mimesis. Adorno's mimesis is supposed to be a creative synthesis of two dichotomies: the life and death instincts (Freud) and the instincts of self-preservation and letting go (Caillois). In Dialectic of Enlightenment. Adorn equates mimesis to the death instinct and development to the life instinct, but only to disguise his departure from both dichotomies. He links every notion of progress to "domination" and reduces it to the mimesis of the "nonorganic," that which is dead. But Adomo did not purge his mimetic theory of every residue of Freud's and Caillois's dualism. I...nstead, he constructed a new opposition within mimesis itself: mimicking that which is dead and that which is living. The roots of this change can be found in his essays on Schubert. Mimicking that which is dead may be understood as an elaboration of the idea of "the landscape of death" in Schubert's music, embodied in a "crystalline form" through which the wanderer moves aimlessly. Mimicking that which is living would resemble Schubert's landscapes in which nature is "reconciled and blissful," landscapes that open up the prospect of regeneration. Schubert's music embodied the irrational hope of all those whom Adorn perceived as mimics from Schubert to all freedom-loving "wanderers" through the world at the end of history that one day the hour of regeneration would come and life once more defeat death. Keywords: Aesthetic Theory, Adomo, Schubert, mimesis, wanderer

Source:
Nineteenth Century Music, 2014, 38, 1, 53-78
Publisher:
  • Univ California Press, Oakland

DOI: 10.1525/ncm.2014.38.1.053

ISSN: 0148-2076

WoS: 000341281700003

Scopus: 2-s2.0-84906996437
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URI
http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1811
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  • Radovi istraživača / Researcher's publications - Odeljenje za sociologiju
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Sociologija / Sociology
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jeremić-Molnar, Dragana
AU  - Molnar, Aleksandar
PY  - 2014
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1811
AB  - In Aesthetic Theory Adorno refers to Schubert as "the mimic par excellence." The connection between Adomo's conception of mimesis and his notion of Schubert has remained unexplored. In his essays "Schubert" and "Franz Schubert: Grand Rondo in A Major for Piano Four-Hands, op. 107" Adomo developed concepts and drew conclusions about Schubert's formal procedures that had a formative influence on his later understanding of mimesis. Adorno's mimesis is supposed to be a creative synthesis of two dichotomies: the life and death instincts (Freud) and the instincts of self-preservation and letting go (Caillois). In Dialectic of Enlightenment. Adorn equates mimesis to the death instinct and development to the life instinct, but only to disguise his departure from both dichotomies. He links every notion of progress to "domination" and reduces it to the mimesis of the "nonorganic," that which is dead. But Adomo did not purge his mimetic theory of every residue of Freud's and Caillois's dualism. Instead, he constructed a new opposition within mimesis itself: mimicking that which is dead and that which is living. The roots of this change can be found in his essays on Schubert. Mimicking that which is dead may be understood as an elaboration of the idea of "the landscape of death" in Schubert's music, embodied in a "crystalline form" through which the wanderer moves aimlessly. Mimicking that which is living would resemble Schubert's landscapes in which nature is "reconciled and blissful," landscapes that open up the prospect of regeneration. Schubert's music embodied the irrational hope of all those whom Adorn perceived as mimics from Schubert to all freedom-loving "wanderers" through the world at the end of history that one day the hour of regeneration would come and life once more defeat death. Keywords: Aesthetic Theory, Adomo, Schubert, mimesis, wanderer
PB  - Univ California Press, Oakland
T2  - Nineteenth Century Music
T1  - Adorno, Schubert, and Mimesis
EP  - 78
IS  - 1
SP  - 53
VL  - 38
DO  - 10.1525/ncm.2014.38.1.053
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jeremić-Molnar, Dragana and Molnar, Aleksandar",
year = "2014",
abstract = "In Aesthetic Theory Adorno refers to Schubert as "the mimic par excellence." The connection between Adomo's conception of mimesis and his notion of Schubert has remained unexplored. In his essays "Schubert" and "Franz Schubert: Grand Rondo in A Major for Piano Four-Hands, op. 107" Adomo developed concepts and drew conclusions about Schubert's formal procedures that had a formative influence on his later understanding of mimesis. Adorno's mimesis is supposed to be a creative synthesis of two dichotomies: the life and death instincts (Freud) and the instincts of self-preservation and letting go (Caillois). In Dialectic of Enlightenment. Adorn equates mimesis to the death instinct and development to the life instinct, but only to disguise his departure from both dichotomies. He links every notion of progress to "domination" and reduces it to the mimesis of the "nonorganic," that which is dead. But Adomo did not purge his mimetic theory of every residue of Freud's and Caillois's dualism. Instead, he constructed a new opposition within mimesis itself: mimicking that which is dead and that which is living. The roots of this change can be found in his essays on Schubert. Mimicking that which is dead may be understood as an elaboration of the idea of "the landscape of death" in Schubert's music, embodied in a "crystalline form" through which the wanderer moves aimlessly. Mimicking that which is living would resemble Schubert's landscapes in which nature is "reconciled and blissful," landscapes that open up the prospect of regeneration. Schubert's music embodied the irrational hope of all those whom Adorn perceived as mimics from Schubert to all freedom-loving "wanderers" through the world at the end of history that one day the hour of regeneration would come and life once more defeat death. Keywords: Aesthetic Theory, Adomo, Schubert, mimesis, wanderer",
publisher = "Univ California Press, Oakland",
journal = "Nineteenth Century Music",
title = "Adorno, Schubert, and Mimesis",
pages = "78-53",
number = "1",
volume = "38",
doi = "10.1525/ncm.2014.38.1.053"
}
Jeremić-Molnar, D.,& Molnar, A.. (2014). Adorno, Schubert, and Mimesis. in Nineteenth Century Music
Univ California Press, Oakland., 38(1), 53-78.
https://doi.org/10.1525/ncm.2014.38.1.053
Jeremić-Molnar D, Molnar A. Adorno, Schubert, and Mimesis. in Nineteenth Century Music. 2014;38(1):53-78.
doi:10.1525/ncm.2014.38.1.053 .
Jeremić-Molnar, Dragana, Molnar, Aleksandar, "Adorno, Schubert, and Mimesis" in Nineteenth Century Music, 38, no. 1 (2014):53-78,
https://doi.org/10.1525/ncm.2014.38.1.053 . .

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