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Yale journal of music & religion, 2021-06, Vol.6 (2)
2021

Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Assimilating to Art-Religion: Jewish Secularity and Edgar Zilsel’s Geniereligion (1918)
Ist Teil von
  • Yale journal of music & religion, 2021-06, Vol.6 (2)
Ort / Verlag
New Haven: Yale University, Institute of Sacred Music
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
EZB Free E-Journals
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • In 1918, Edgar Zilsel-a Marxist-Jewish philosopher who was soon to be exiled from Vienna-published a sociological study that later readers have found prescient of fascism. In Die Geniereligion ("The Religion of Genius"), Zilsel cautioned against the hidden dangers of elevating secular figures to the status of deities. As early as 1912, Zilsel was disturbed by how art-religion shaped music culture: his earliest published essay ruminated on timelessness and canonicity, on striving for heavenly tones while cast down to the earthly squalor of the concert hall. Indeed, in Zilsel's Vienna, art-religion had come to dominate the music world-biographers made Beethoven a surrogate Christ, composers' mementos circulated as relics, and historic houses became sites of pilgrimage. This article argues that Zilsel's Geniereligion was not only an extension of his disdain for timelessness, but also bears subtle traces of Jewish disillusionment at the impossibility of assimilation to a secular arts culture. To enact their "civic self-improvement" (bürgerliche Verbesserung), Jews pursued educational self-cultivation (Bildung) that immersed them in the German national canon; and while this canon purported to be a secular neutral space, its Catholic practices of artist-veneration forced Jews to assimilate to a distinctly Christian brand of art-religion. When read against this cultural backdrop, Zilsel's Geniereligion emerges as a subtle Jewish response to the promises and failures of secularity.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISSN: 2377-231X
eISSN: 2377-231X
DOI: 10.17132/2377-231X.1169
Titel-ID: cdi_proquest_journals_2573021943
Format
Schlagworte
Jewish people, Religion

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