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How is it possible for a seriously flawed human being to produce art that is good, true, and beautiful? Why is the art of Richard Wagner, a very imperfect man, important and even indispensable to us?
In this volume, Father Owen Lee ventures an answer to those questions by way of a figure in Sophocles - the hero Philoctetes. Gifted by his god with a bow that would always shoot true to the mark and indispensable to his fellow Greeks, he was marked by the same god with an odious wound that made him hateful and hated. Sophocles' powerful insight is that those blessed by the gods and indispensable to men are visited as well with great vulnerability and suffering.
Wagner: The Terrible Man and His Truthful Art traces some of Wagner's extraordinary influence for good and ill on a century of art and politics - on Eliot and Proust as well as on Adolf Hitler - and discusses in detail Wagner's Tannhouser, the work in which the composer first dramatised the Faustian struggle of a creative artist in whom 'two souls dwell.' In the course of this penetrating study, Father Lee argues that Wagner's ambivalent art is indispensable to us, life-enhancing and ultimately healing.
116 pages, Kindle Edition
First published August 30, 1999


for no other composer goes down into such dark & forbidden chasms, nor up to such blinding brightness, liberating passions high & low, tearing bandages off unhealing wounds. Go to Wagner's Ring Cycle and at the end of the week, you have had the equivalent of a year in a psychiatrist's chair.The 2nd section examines Richard Wagner's influence, alluding to the writings of Joseph Conrad, Willa Cather, E.M. Forster, Virginia Woolf & James Joyce, with the last reference suggesting that in following the pilgrimage of Stephen Dedalus & Leopold Bloom through Dublin streets, the reader is following a quest mapped out in Homer's Odyssey but it is also "a quest in which meanings accrue through a hundred recurrent leitmotifs, a la Wagner".
