Austria as Theater and Ideology: The Meaning of the Salzburg Festival / Edition 1

Austria as Theater and Ideology: The Meaning of the Salzburg Festival / Edition 1

by Michael P. Steinberg
ISBN-10:
0801486920
ISBN-13:
9780801486920
Pub. Date:
08/15/2000
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
ISBN-10:
0801486920
ISBN-13:
9780801486920
Pub. Date:
08/15/2000
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Austria as Theater and Ideology: The Meaning of the Salzburg Festival / Edition 1

Austria as Theater and Ideology: The Meaning of the Salzburg Festival / Edition 1

by Michael P. Steinberg

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Overview

Austria's renowned Salzburg Festival has from the outset engaged issues of cultural identity in a country that has difficulty coming to terms with its twentieth-century history. That this is the case was especially apparent in 1999, when the Austrian president opened the festival with a speech attacking its profile under the direction of Gerard Mortier and calling for a return to the ideals of its spiritual founder, Hugo von Hofmannsthal. This proved the opening shot in a renewed debate about the direction of the Festival, which is in fact a debate about the identity of Austria itself. The issues posed foreshadowed the uproar that erupted several months later when Joerg Haider's right-wing Freedom Party joined a coalition with the conservative People's Party, wresting control of the government from the Socialists and provoking the wrath of Austria's partners within the European Union. What accounts for the profound intellectual and cultural ambivalences that have characterized Austrian history in the twentieth century? In this highly regarded book, Michael P. Steinberg investigates the goals and meanings of the Salzburg Festival from its origins in the wake of defeat in World War I and the collapse of the Habsburg Empire. He focuses on those aspects that reveal with special clarity the interplay between the Festival's history and the larger problems of Austrian and German ideology and identity. At the heart of his analysis is the problem of "nationalist cosmopolitanism," which he sees as a central element of German and Austrian culture from the period of the German enlightenment on. He shows how the Festival sought to embody and extend this paradoxical tradition and, in the Preface to the Cornell Paperbacks edition, explores the latest chapter in the Austrian culture wars. Steinberg's book is at once a brilliant history of an important cultural institution and a work that deepens our understanding of the unstable relationship between culture and politics in Europe at the beginning of the twenty-first century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801486920
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 08/15/2000
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.75(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Michael P. Steinberg is Professor of History at Cornell University. He is the editor of Walter Benjamin and the Demands of History, also from Cornell.

Table of Contents

Illustrationsvi
Preface to the Cornell Paperbacks Editionvii
Prefacexix
1.The Ideology of the Baroque, 1860-19381
2.Festival Planning and Cultural Planning37
3.Nationalist Cosmopolitanism84
4.German Culture and Austrian Kulturpolitik116
5.Allegory and Authority in the Work of Hugo von Hofmannsthal142
6.The Catholic Culture of the Austrian Jews, 1890-1938164
7.Festival Repertory and Its Contexts, 1920-1943196
Conclusion: Transformations of the Baroque223
AppendixFestival Repertory, 1920-1944233
Bibliography236
Index247

What People are Saying About This

Gerard Mortier

Michael P. Steinberg's book is more than a history of the Salzburg Festival. It is an important study of the relations between culture and politics in general.

Edward W. Said

Steinberg makes the case with remarkable scholarship and analysis that summertime Salzburg... was the scene of an attempt to reconstitute Austria as a European cultural center after it had been marginalized by the collapse of the Habsburg empire. This new image of Austria was to be at once nationalist and, in its attachment to ideals taken from the Catholic Baroque, universalist and conservative.

From the Publisher

Austria as Theater and Ideology provides fascinating insights into various aspects of the culture that shaped the Salzburg Festival.... Integrating political history, biography, drama, and opera analyses and critique of ideology, Steinberg places the Salzburg Festival in the broad framework of Austrian intellectual history. The book is a well-researched, thoughtful, stimulating, often provocative study of one of Austria's most beloved, yet controversial, institutions.

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