Nietzsche’s Dionysos

Nietzsche’s Dionysus, admittedly, represents a direct provocation and an attack on the classical interpretation accepted since Winckelmann, an interpretation that elevates the Apollonian to its central point of focus; Nietzsche’s introduction of another principle to oppose it, rather than representi...

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Main Author: Dieter Mersch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Performance Philosophy 2017-12-01
Series:Performance Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/183
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spelling doaj-c89c95d0cbec44eb88c87ed2bf3f84042020-11-24T21:28:01ZengPerformance PhilosophyPerformance Philosophy2057-71762017-12-013360461510.21476/PP.2017.33183101Nietzsche’s DionysosDieter Mersch0Zurich University of the ArtsNietzsche’s Dionysus, admittedly, represents a direct provocation and an attack on the classical interpretation accepted since Winckelmann, an interpretation that elevates the Apollonian to its central point of focus; Nietzsche’s introduction of another principle to oppose it, rather than representing a genuine invention, in actuality bridges the small gap between Hegel and Hölderlin. If, namely, the Hegelian aesthetic from the very beginning points to Schein and Erscheinung – as necessary conditions of truth, for the truth would not exist if it were not to “superficially appear” (scheinen) and “make its appearance” (erscheinen), writes Hegel – Schein and Erscheinung would still nonetheless be bound up everywhere with the criterium of the absolute; after all, the untruth of the aesthetic rests squarely in the fact that it cannot do other than to draw upon the language of Erscheinung. For Hölderlin, on the other hand, the Dionysian advances to become a metapoetic symbol combining itself – the enigmatic and continually transforming – with the practice of art. Nietzsche follows those very same lines even while giving the metaphor a thoroughly different twist.https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/183avant-gardeapollonianDionysosDionysianaesthetic of differenceappearanceformgestaltsublimerupturefissureconstellationparadoxcontradictionNietzscheHeideggerDerridaLyotardAdorno
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dieter Mersch
spellingShingle Dieter Mersch
Nietzsche’s Dionysos
Performance Philosophy
avant-garde
apollonian
Dionysos
Dionysian
aesthetic of difference
appearance
form
gestalt
sublime
rupture
fissure
constellation
paradox
contradiction
Nietzsche
Heidegger
Derrida
Lyotard
Adorno
author_facet Dieter Mersch
author_sort Dieter Mersch
title Nietzsche’s Dionysos
title_short Nietzsche’s Dionysos
title_full Nietzsche’s Dionysos
title_fullStr Nietzsche’s Dionysos
title_full_unstemmed Nietzsche’s Dionysos
title_sort nietzsche’s dionysos
publisher Performance Philosophy
series Performance Philosophy
issn 2057-7176
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Nietzsche’s Dionysus, admittedly, represents a direct provocation and an attack on the classical interpretation accepted since Winckelmann, an interpretation that elevates the Apollonian to its central point of focus; Nietzsche’s introduction of another principle to oppose it, rather than representing a genuine invention, in actuality bridges the small gap between Hegel and Hölderlin. If, namely, the Hegelian aesthetic from the very beginning points to Schein and Erscheinung – as necessary conditions of truth, for the truth would not exist if it were not to “superficially appear” (scheinen) and “make its appearance” (erscheinen), writes Hegel – Schein and Erscheinung would still nonetheless be bound up everywhere with the criterium of the absolute; after all, the untruth of the aesthetic rests squarely in the fact that it cannot do other than to draw upon the language of Erscheinung. For Hölderlin, on the other hand, the Dionysian advances to become a metapoetic symbol combining itself – the enigmatic and continually transforming – with the practice of art. Nietzsche follows those very same lines even while giving the metaphor a thoroughly different twist.
topic avant-garde
apollonian
Dionysos
Dionysian
aesthetic of difference
appearance
form
gestalt
sublime
rupture
fissure
constellation
paradox
contradiction
Nietzsche
Heidegger
Derrida
Lyotard
Adorno
url https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/183
work_keys_str_mv AT dietermersch nietzschesdionysos
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