Wagner's ring and the european union have a lot in common | thearticle
Wagner's ring and the european union have a lot in common | thearticle"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
In 1848, the European year of revolutions, Wagner began what became his great _ Ring _ cycle, revived this season by the Royal Opera and broadcast by the BBC. Like any great work of
literature its themes illuminate human ambitions and politics, and as a uniquely European creation (it derives from a medieval saga called the _ Nibelungenlied _ ) it may hold lessons for
the European Union. Thinking of the ring itself as the Euro with treaties engraved on Wotan’s spear, the construction of Valhalla, built by the giants, can serve as a metaphor for the modern
European Union. At the end the whole edifice goes up in flames partly because of an over-weaning sense of entitlement, and partly because Wotan is unable to correct flaws in the payment for
Valhalla. Wagner’s framework has three levels: the Nibelungs, industrious smiths who dwell in the depths of the earth; the giants who reside on the earth’s surface; and the gods, spirits of
light who live on the cloudy heights. Wotan, king of the gods, arranges for the giants to build Valhalla, but to pay them he steals the gold that Alberich, master of the Nibelungs, took
from the Rhine and the ring of power he created from it. One giant then kills his brother, takes all the treasure and turns into a dragon to guard it forever. In the remaining three operas
of the _ Ring _ cycle Wotan seeks a way to recover the gold and return it to the Rhine, thereby nullifying his theft of what was originally stolen from its depths by Alberich. Thus will he
preserve the treaties inscribed on his spear, and the gods can live on peacefully in Valhalla. The serious obstacle to this is the existence of the ring, but his plan is a deep one. He
fathers two children, Siegmund and Sieglinde, and forges a sword that can kill the dragon. The children initially grow up together, but are later split apart (like West and East Germany),
with Sieglinde being forcibly married to a man she doesn’t love (like East Germany’s forced marriage to the Soviet Union). Then, following the Prologue ( _ Rheingold _ ), Siegmund and
Sieglinde reunite, become lovers, and Siegmund grasps the sword that Wotan created. With the plan now well under way, Wotan’s wife Fricka strongly objects, pointing out that Siegmund is not
the free hero that Wotan thought he had created, and he bows to her demands, breaking the sword with his spear. Siegmund is killed, and Sieglinde later dies giving birth to their son
Siegfried (united Germany). Here now is the free hero that Wotan wanted. He re-forges the sword, kills the dragon and takes the ring. In the meantime, Wotan places his daughter Brünnhilde
into a deep sleep as punishment for having tried to protect Siegmund from the pursuing husband, and help Sieglinde escape. Surrounded by fire she can only be woken by the most fearless of
heroes — Siegfried himself. After coming to manhood he breaks Wotan’s spear with its treaties, awakes Brünnhilde, wins her as his wife, and all is now set for the completion of Wotan’s plan
to return the gold to the Rhine. But the ring displays an independent power. Siegfried gives it to Brünnhilde as a token of their union, and departs on a great journey. She refuses to give
it up when one of her sisters begs her, and when Siegfried returns, drugged and duped by Alberich’s son Hagen into forgetting his marriage to Brünnhilde, he forcibly takes it back, setting
the stage for catastrophe. Hagen keeps watch and waits, communicating in a dream with his father Alberich, two embodiments of naked ambition scheming to regain a power they consider
rightfully theirs, like Putin and Hitler. When Siegfried, now wearing the ring, brings Brünnhilde as a wife for Hagen’s half-brother, fury and deception lead to oaths being sworn on the
point of Hagen’s spear. Siegfried has been manipulated, but by the time he remembers that Brünnhilde is his beloved wife, it is too late. Hagen thrusts his spear into Siegfried’s back. There
follows one of the great orchestral moments of the Ring, Siegfried’s funeral march as they carry his corpse back to the palace. Brünnhilde, finally realising how she herself has been duped
into condemning him, demands a great funeral pyre be erected, rides her horse into the flames, and as the Rhine overflows its banks and Hagen reaches for the ring, the river sweeps him
aside. The Rhinemaidens claim the ring, taking it down to the watery depths, while flames consume Valhalla. It is the end of the _ Ring _ cycle, the destruction of Valhalla and, as the title
of final opera ( _ Götterdämmerung _ ) states, the Twilight of the Gods. As a Wagner aficionado, Germany’s chancellor Angela Merkel knows the story well, but seems to have had no more power
to act than the characters in the drama. Having seen the spear and its Euro treaties break the sword of democracy wielded by George Papandreou of Greece seven years ago, she is fully aware
of the problem, but her solution at the time was to strengthen the spear, strengthen the treaties. This worked, but nationalist voices now call for weakening the spear, which could yet be
broken. In Wagner’s _ Ring _ , after Siegfried has broken the spear, Wotan resigns himself to the idea that his days are over and that his grandson Siegfried will inherit the earth. But it
doesn’t turn out that way. Other forces are at play. The ring inspires huge envy. No one can give it up. Rejection requires too much strength of purpose, and Hagen’s schemes cause its owner
to forget recent history and betray the union (with Brünnhilde) he so joyfully joined. Can the same happen with the EU, tied as it now is to the fate of the Euro? Rejecting it and its
associated treaties is surely part of the reason for the British vote to leave, and may yet cause further ructions. The clash of fiscal rules with democratic legitimacy remains a serious
problem, but no-one has yet come up with a plan to dissolve the Euro. The idealism that inspired its creation still burns brightly in Continental Europe, suffering as it has from wars and
internecine conflict, but the focus on internal problems ignores external threats. As in Wagner’s great European masterpiece, born of European internal conflict, external threats may not be
recognised until too late.
Trending News
The page you were looking for doesn't exist.You may have mistyped the address or the page may have moved.By proceeding, you agree to our Terms & Conditions and our ...
Not only uapa and pmla, now getting bail under bnss will be difficult tooThe presumption of innocence is a fundamental principle in Indian criminal law, even in the BNSS, is based this principl...
Did it snow in los angeles in december 2020?Claim: In December 2020, snow fell in the Los Angeles County area. What's True Snowfall did occur in the mountains,...
Marine vhf: what you need to knowPUBLISHED ON July 20th, 2024 Published since 1974, Practical Sailor is the only independent product test report of sailb...
Some states tax your social security benefitsMINNESOTA For 2024, Minnesotans with AGIs of up to $82,190 for an individual and up to $105,380 for a couple filing join...
Latests News
Wagner's ring and the european union have a lot in common | thearticleIn 1848, the European year of revolutions, Wagner began what became his great _ Ring _ cycle, revived this season by the...
Masks and distancing make it tough for the hard-of-hearing, but here’s how to helpThe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that all Americans wear face coverings when in public. Ho...
I’m a lockdown sceptic. Just don’t call me a killer | thearticleFor those few of us who have been consistently against lockdowns in their many forms since the first was decreed more th...
Rdrm31507 - remittance basis: introduction to the remittance basis: transitional provisions: relevant foreign income and offshore loans - example 7 -RDRM31507 - REMITTANCE BASIS: INTRODUCTION TO THE REMITTANCE BASIS: TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS: RELEVANT FOREIGN INCOME AND...
Breaking: police officer run down by car close to white house in dcA vehicle veered off the road and into the barrier near the Library of Congress at Capitol Hill. One officer has receive...