Preview

Versus

Advanced search

For the Love of Opera

https://doi.org/10.58186/2782-3660-2023-3-1-23-54

Abstract

Drawing on the ideas of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan, Mladen Dolar and Slavoj Žižek, founders of the Ljubljana school of psychoanalysis, turn in their work to opera, with Mladen Dolar focusing on Mozart and Slavoj Žižek on Wagner. The title of their work refers to the two deaths, symbolic and real, of which Lacan speaks in connection with ethics and aesthetics in his Seminar VII. Death, along with love, forms the center of both the operatic and the psychoanalytic narrative. Recently, the psychoanalytic approach to opera has become notorious. Typically, its product is a deconstructionist reading of the libretto or, even worse, a rather primitive Freudian debunking of its (patriarchal, anti-Semitic, and/or anti-feminist) prejudices. However, the authors argue that opera deserves better. The historical relationship between opera and psychoanalysis is suggestive. The moment of the birth of psychoanalysis (early twentieth century) is also often perceived as the moment of the death of opera—as if after psychoanalysis, opera, at least in its traditional form, was no longer possible. Not surprisingly, echoes of Freudianism are present in most contenders for the title of the last opera.

About the Authors

S. Žižek
University of London; University of Ljubljana
United Kingdom

Slavoj Žižek



M. Dolar
University of Ljubljana; Jan Van Eyck Academie
Slovenia

Mladen Dolar



References

1. Braunstein N. A. Le desir de Scarpia. Analytica, vol. 46, Paris, Navarin, 1986.

2. Cooke D. I Saw the World End, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1979.

3. Cord W. O. An Introduction to Richard Wagner’s “Der Ring des Nibelungen”, Athens, Ohio University Press, 1983.

4. Donington R. Wagner’s “Ring” and Its Symbols, London, Faber and Faber, 1990.

5. Gutman R. Richard Wagner, New York, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1990.

6. Laclos Ch. de. Opasnye svyazi [Les liaisons dangereuses], Moscow; Leningrad, Nauka, 1965.

7. Lear J. Happiness, Death, and the Remainder of Life, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2000.

8. Ledbetter S. Notes to: Charles Mackerras. Cosi fan tutte, CD, TELARC, 80399.

9. Lindenberger H. Opera in History, Stanford, Stanford University Press, 1998.

10. Mannoni O. “Je sais bien, mais quand meme…”. Clefs pour l’imaginaire ou l’Autre Scène, Paris, Editions du Seuil, 1969.

11. Salecl R., Žižek S. Gaze and Voice as Love Objects, vol. 1, Durham, Duke University Press, 1996.

12. Sterbini C. Sevil’skii tsiryul’nik (libretto) [Il Barbiere di Siviglia (libretto)]. Libretto oper (Opera librettos). URL: http://libretto-oper.ru/rossini/sevilskii-ciryulnik.

13. Tanner M. Wagner, London, Flamingo, 1997.

14. Wagner R. Prose Works, vol. 6, London, K. Paul, 1972.

15. Watson D. The Wordsworth Dictionary of Musical Quotations, Edinburgh, Wordsworth, 1994.

16. Žižek S. Tarrying with the Negative, Durham, Duke University Press, 1993.

17. Žižek S. Shchekotlivyj sub’ekt [The Ticklish Subject], Moscow, Delo Publishers of RANEPA, 2014.

18. Žižek S. Vozvyshennyi ob’ekt ideologii [The Sublime Object of Ideology], Moscow, Khudozhestvennyi zhurnal, 1999.

19. Zupančič A. Etika real’nogo [Ethics of the Real], Saint-Petersburg, Skifia-Print, 2019.


Review

For citations:


Žižek S., Dolar M. For the Love of Opera. Versus. 2023;3(1):23-54. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.58186/2782-3660-2023-3-1-23-54

Views: 164


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2782-3660 (Print)
ISSN 2782-3679 (Online)